when you transferred it to him, he became the legal owner of the gun. unless you have paperwork with his signature on it stating it would be returned to you at a later date or that you would be compensated, you have no evidence and thus no case.
it's possible, i have a polycarbonate face shield that is iiia. i'd imagine two glasses sized pieces of that would stop iiia threats as well assuming it was sufficiently anchored to avoid pushing the material back far enough to hit your eyes...
only thing i can think would be a problem would be if the oil swept in contaminants sufficient to clog the firing pin area. also heard it can deactivate primers and discolor some stock materials. i doubt it would cause any serious damage, though, didn't they use to store guns in vats of oil...
it's 2016, there's no excuse for overpaying, so i place the blame squarely on the buyer.
not only is the information to make an informed decision out there, it's available within 5 clicks and 30 seconds.
my experience exactly when i do go to them. i usually use them more as opportunities to look around/handle a variety of guns, and less as opportunities to spend money. the real treasure is often in the parking lot outside, those are the guys who need to sell their guns and will have better prices.
ubc=registration=confiscation.
nfa is illegal, as it infringes rkba. inb4 a lawyer, i know, you're right, so were the British in 1775, doesn't change the result.
has anyone posted this? it's relevant, and likely an unexpected way to buy seconds to flee or respond with force.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PTAXUYLbFYk
but tbh i consider a good can of mace to be the next best thing to a firearm. ranged, multi-shot capability, in a small easy to...
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