Goddamnit I HATE UTAH!burnzz wrote:
Colorado combo breaker!
easiest state in the union to get a permit. stand in line Sonder, there are 10 blue states ahead of youSonderKommando wrote:
Goddamnit I HATE UTAH!burnzz wrote:
Colorado combo breaker!
Maine is pretty easy too, just takes an hour.burnzz wrote:
easiest state in the union to get a permit. stand in line Sonder, there are 10 blue states ahead of youSonderKommando wrote:
Goddamnit I HATE UTAH!burnzz wrote:
Colorado combo breaker!
If the women don't find ya handsome. They should at least find ya handy.
Don't need one in Az
Getting one still has some advantages though.
Baba Booey
That pretty much sums up what pistols I would like to own if I was in a shooting club1stSFOD-Delta wrote:
http://i578.photobucket.com/albums/ss22 … G_5604.jpg
USP, 1911 & Glock(is it a 17?)
Your thoughts, insights, and musings on this matter intrigue me
you forgot the "full auto" . . .FloppY_ wrote:
That pretty much sums up what pistols I would like to own if I was in a shooting club1stSFOD-Delta wrote:
http://i578.photobucket.com/albums/ss22 … G_5604.jpg
USP, 1911 & Glock(is it a 17?)
It's a Glock 21SF .45 Auto. The Glock 17 is 9mmFloppY_ wrote:
That pretty much sums up what pistols I would like to own if I was in a shooting club1stSFOD-Delta wrote:
http://i578.photobucket.com/albums/ss22 … G_5604.jpg
USP, 1911 & Glock(is it a 17?)
Baba Booey
Which is your favorite?1stSFOD-Delta wrote:
http://i578.photobucket.com/albums/ss22 … G_5604.jpg
I don't know, really. I have so many now. The one I probably wanted the most was the Glock 17, which was the first handgun I had actually bought. USP a close second. But then my first handgun was that stainless Colt that was past down to me. It was actually the first handgun I had ever shot. idk, I like all my guns a lot.west-phoenix-az wrote:
Which is your favorite?1stSFOD-Delta wrote:
http://i578.photobucket.com/albums/ss22 … G_5604.jpg
Baba Booey
I'm guessing a G18C is as impossible to get legally in the US as a full auto mac10 isburnzz wrote:
you forgot the "full auto" . . .FloppY_ wrote:
That pretty much sums up what pistols I would like to own if I was in a shooting club1stSFOD-Delta wrote:
http://i578.photobucket.com/albums/ss22 … G_5604.jpg
USP, 1911 & Glock(is it a 17?)
Your thoughts, insights, and musings on this matter intrigue me
Need a class 3 license to get any automatic weapon, even then.FloppY_ wrote:
I'm guessing a G18C is as impossible to get legally in the US as a full auto mac10 isburnzz wrote:
you forgot the "full auto" . . .FloppY_ wrote:
That pretty much sums up what pistols I would like to own if I was in a shooting club
USP, 1911 & Glock(is it a 17?)
If the women don't find ya handsome. They should at least find ya handy.
Get a WWII Colt1stSFOD-Delta wrote:
I don't know, really. I have so many now. The one I probably wanted the most was the Glock 17, which was the first handgun I had actually bought. USP a close second. But then my first handgun was that stainless Colt that was past down to me. It was actually the first handgun I had ever shot. idk, I like all my guns a lot.west-phoenix-az wrote:
Which is your favorite?1stSFOD-Delta wrote:
http://i578.photobucket.com/albums/ss22 … G_5604.jpg
Your thoughts, insights, and musings on this matter intrigue me
nope not impossible.FloppY_ wrote:
I'm guessing a G18C is as impossible to get legally in the US as a full auto mac10 isburnzz wrote:
you forgot the "full auto" . . .FloppY_ wrote:
That pretty much sums up what pistols I would like to own if I was in a shooting club
USP, 1911 & Glock(is it a 17?)
http://www.gunbroker.com/Auction/ViewIt … =208749844
Its a pain in teh ass but its possible.
Expensive no doubt, but looks possible and you need the cash for ammo when you finally get itUnkleRukus wrote:
Need a class 3 license to get any automatic weapon, even then.FloppY_ wrote:
I'm guessing a G18C is as impossible to get legally in the US as a full auto mac10 isburnzz wrote:
you forgot the "full auto" . . .
Your thoughts, insights, and musings on this matter intrigue me
Make X-meds a full member, for the sake of 15 year old anal gangbang porn watchers everywhere!
I don't think any full auto Glocks were registered before the cutoff. If any did make in on the registration, it's probably not many, which makes them even more expensive and hard to find. Besides law enforcement and government agencies only businesses who deal in manufacturing or sales of those types of firearms can legally posses full autos that didn't make it into the registration.
A lot of Mac's were registered before the cutoff. They're probably the cheapest full auto you're going to find in the US.
There are a lot of Uzi's out there too, but they go for a little more.
A lot of Mac's were registered before the cutoff. They're probably the cheapest full auto you're going to find in the US.
There are a lot of Uzi's out there too, but they go for a little more.
The NFA process is a bit of a pain, if NFA items are even allowed in your state. Any full-auto is going to go for a premium of around 10-20X what a semi-auto version would cost. (used M-16 $15,000 vs. new AR-15 for $1200)
Registered full-autos are generally the toys of the rich. (I have only heard of three cases where registered full-autos were used in crime, and one was a negligence case where a kid accidentally shot himself.)
Registered full-autos are generally the toys of the rich. (I have only heard of three cases where registered full-autos were used in crime, and one was a negligence case where a kid accidentally shot himself.)
I knew a few of these rich guys. I used to do WWII reenactments and alot of those guys had PPSH's MP40's STG44's... it was ridiculous. Saw a few MG42's and 34's too. I was like how the F do you guys afford all this shit.RAIMIUS wrote:
The NFA process is a bit of a pain, if NFA items are even allowed in your state. Any full-auto is going to go for a premium of around 10-20X what a semi-auto version would cost. (used M-16 $15,000 vs. new AR-15 for $1200)
Registered full-autos are generally the toys of the rich. (I have only heard of three cases where registered full-autos were used in crime, and one was a negligence case where a kid accidentally shot himself.)
Yeah, this is about as expensive as I'll go for a while:
Some improvements:
Aimpoint M2 on a LaRue mount
TLR-1 on a Midwest Industries front sight mount
5.11 single point sling on an A2 adaptor
Some improvements:
Aimpoint M2 on a LaRue mount
TLR-1 on a Midwest Industries front sight mount
5.11 single point sling on an A2 adaptor
How does the cutoff work? Before a certain date they were legal, now they're not to sell them new so you have to buy them second hand off people who already owned one? Or are they just really expensive for a new one?west-phoenix-az wrote:
I don't think any full auto Glocks were registered before the cutoff. If any did make in on the registration, it's probably not many, which makes them even more expensive and hard to find. Besides law enforcement and government agencies only businesses who deal in manufacturing or sales of those types of firearms can legally posses full autos that didn't make it into the registration.
A lot of Mac's were registered before the cutoff. They're probably the cheapest full auto you're going to find in the US.
There are a lot of Uzi's out there too, but they go for a little more.
This I think.Before a certain date they were legal, now they're not to sell them new so you have to buy them second hand off people who already owned one?
Fuck Israel
Yeah the registration for full-autos (machine guns) was closed. No new machine guns could be added to the registry after 1986. So only the machine guns registered before the 1986 cutoff are available to the public. That makes all machine guns more expensive. I don't know if the actual number of registered machine guns was ever released, but there are still a lot of them out there.
http://machinegunpriceguide.com/html/transferable_.html
The National Firearms Act of 1934 (NFA) established a $200 tax on the transfer of Machine Guns, sawed-off shotguns, short barreled rifles and innocuous silencers. These things are now referred to as NFA items. This amounted to at least a 100% tax on NFA items and, more importantly, it established the first control over Machine Guns and their transfer by the Federal Government. Over 30 years later, the Gun Control Act of 1968 (GCA68) restricted the importation of surplus military weapons into the US. Ironically, gun manufacturers lobbied hard for GCA68 because they concluded that cheap military surplus was killing the market for their products. Little did they anticipate the full draconian measure of GCA68, but it effectively stopped all military surplus, including US models, from being (re)imported into the US. Obviously that included Machine Guns and all manner of automatic weapons. Machine Guns imported into the US after 1968 could only be owned by a Special Occupation Taxpayer (SOT) that we know as a Machine Gun Dealer and these Machine Guns became known as pre-86 or pre-May dealer samples for reasons that will soon be apparent. It took almost 20 years to correct many of the injustices of GCA68 through legislation known as The Firearms Owner’s Protection Act of 1986 (FOPA). But FOPA and its infamous late-night Hughes Amendment made all Machine Guns unlawful to be owned by individuals except those that were registered in the ATF’s National Firearms Registration and Transfer Record (NFRTR) before May 19, 1986. Those Machine Guns registered after that date are known as post-86 dealer samples and can also only be owned by a SOT but only for law enforcement or military demonstrations.
dude a full auto .45? SICK!1stSFOD-Delta wrote:
http://i578.photobucket.com/albums/ss22 … G_5604.jpg