Zaydok Allen
Member
- Joined
- Feb 12, 2011
- Messages
- 13,274
We need Barrett to start making pistols and sub guns. Could be very interesting.
Totally impractical and wasteful, but hilarious.
Totally impractical and wasteful, but hilarious.
Unless you get a Rem 7600 that has never been assembled as a rifle it can never be a "pistol".Call me odd, but I want a 7600 Remington made into a pistol.
Well, you didn't read anything in the ATF definition of "SBR" above did you? "A weapon made from a rifle" falls within the definition of SBR.For deer hunting.
Explicitly states SBR is not legal for deer here.
But a WMFaR is not an SBR
Cool, yes, but good luck explaining how your new NFA firearm isn't an SBR.Still cost 200 bucks to the Feds and wait before build.....but how freakin' cool.
Free floated bbl, pump action, mag fed..........am thinking .243.
Yet he's flat out wrong.Varminterror,
Excellent, informative posts. I appreciated the screenshots; clearer and substantiated what you wrote.
Indeed! He’d find a way to make it a break action though.Does anyone else think the sawed of Krag looks like something Michael Tinker Pearce got a hold of?
3" snub revolver in .50 BMG. You could laugh at people at the range with their Taurus Judges.We need Barrett to start making pistols and sub guns. Could be very interesting.
You, sir, have a warped sense of humor. I like that about a person.Totally impractical and wasteful, but hilarious.
It could have been an antique (and therefore, a "non-gun") in its original rifle configuration. However, in its cut-down NFA configuration, a different definition of "antique" would apply. A pre-1899 cartridge gun is not an antique for NFA purposes unless its ammunition is not available in the ordinary channels of commercial trade. All those pre-1899 Colt Potato Diggers, Maxims, etc. are Title II firearms if they fire commonly-available ammunition.Could the fact that the Krag is an antique have anything to do with the conversion? It be like cutting down a percussion rifle.
A cartridge shotgun with a barrel shorter than 18" is NFA regardless of when made, provided its ammunition is currently available. If it was made before 1899 and the barrel(s) are 18" or longer, it's an antique.Soooo, cut down antique cartridge shotguns before 1899 are NFA ?
A percussion muzzleloader would be an antique regardless of barrel length and regardless of when made. It could have been made yesterday.How about my 14" barrel 10 guage percussion SxS ?
Suppose that the Krag pistol in question was chopped down to pistol form prior to the NFA laws being enacted. I suppose it to be legal to own,
There was an amnesty in 1934 during which pre-existing NFA items were supposed to be registered. If they were not, then they became contraband. Not legal to own, and not transferable, unless a special ATF determination is made removing them from the purview of the NFA because of their rarity, historical significance, etc.Suppose that the Krag pistol in question was chopped down to pistol form prior to the NFA laws being enacted. I suppose it to be legal to own, but transfer would be the question there as it still is a WMFAR although the rifle itself is an antique.
If you lose about 30 poundsCan I get an IWB holster for it?
and use same pants!If you lose about 30 pounds