Apparently one of them is up for auction this month.
http://jamesdjulia.com/item/1709-396/
It was nice to think before the NFA trusts were screwed up by Obama I could have had a chance at owning it.
Folly and fakery have always been with us... but it has never before been as dangerous as it is now, never in history have we been able to afford it less. - Isaac Asimov
Every damn thing you do in this life, you pay for. - Edith Piaf
The party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command. - Orwell
No amount of belief makes something a fact. - James Randi
Looks like any other machine gun type firearm a far as basic operation of a machine gun. Which has the capacity to fire rounds rapidly in succession, with one pull of the trigger. And before Obama, was possible to own, but very restrictive and costly? That is not true now?
Last edited by Ghostpanther; 2017-04-08 at 02:38 PM.
I remember back in the day we had those neon green Super Soaker 50s. I found out that you could remove the water bottle and connect it up to a hose, the threading was the same. Turned it into a freaking pressure washer lol. You were of course limited by hose length and if someone managed to get to the faucet and turn it off, but otherwise you were god. That thing put out so much pressure it would leave welts if you shot someone too close.
I never tried with larger models because we couldn't afford them. Though I do remember a friend's dad took a 200 (big blue one with double bottles), and replaced one of the bottles with a CO2 cartridge. Did just about the same thing as what I was doing with the hose, you didn't need to charge it up, but it would chew through CO2 and water like nobody's business.
Winchester Model 12 for me I think.
Time...line? Time isn't made out of lines. It is made out of circles. That is why clocks are round. ~ Caboose
You yanks aren't exactly confounding national stereotypes much here are you?
I realize I'm really late to the party but are we talking inventend originally in the usa or are we talking "also produced" or even "also sold / available in " the us of a?
Actually some very smart people figured out to get around this. Although depending how many items you plan to buy it could get a little strange...
1.) Step one create a trust for new NFA item(s) (if buying more than one at a single time)
2.) Get approved with just your submission credentials.
3.) Ammend trust with additional responsible parties
4.) Rinse and repeat with all future NFA items.
So you may end up with 20+ different trusts for 20+ nfa items, but technically you can do this.
https://www.silencershop.com/single-shot-trust.html
Oh the irony in this statement. =/
There is a reason 9mm is the most used duty round in the world and why no one issues .44 magnum duty revolvers or desert eagles.
Last edited by TITAN308; 2017-04-09 at 12:23 AM.
ATF specifically said you could do stuff like this, though the Silencershop stuff gets a bit odd. Believing you can sell a trust containing only an NFA item gets into iffy/ tax evasion stuff. Doing a trust then adding more folks is spelled out in the FAQ for ATF.
The single shot trusts are also formed in a different state (they avoided mentioning the which in the discussion) so they don't require notarizing, which is nice, but seems like another "how to avoid your state requirements" thing.
In any case, there's plenty of ways to do it, trust or no.
"I only feel two things Gary, nothing, and nothingness."
In Ohio at least, the Highway Patrol use to carry .357 mag revolvers , but switched to 9 mm autos for two primary reasons, a much larger round capacity handgun without reloading and cost. Not disputing your comment, but there may be more going on than just they feel the 9 mm is a better round. It certainly is a round which can get the job done.
My favorite guns are the 1911 guns, since I was a kid I always thought they were cool. Have no idea if they're any good btw, never used a gun.