Skeptic13
Member
Definitely not worth the risk.
Disagree. In today's litigious society any object that you owned, even after it leaves your possession, responsibility stays with you (using the coffee example, the person bought a cup of coffee and took it into her possession. It belonged to her, it was with her in her car, the restaurant transferred ownership to her, but when she spilled it on herself, the restaurant was responsible)...If you built the car from parts, yes.
If you rebuilt the saw, yes.
Anything modified from the factory leaves the seller potentially liable Life is risk.
Actually, you just agreed with me.Disagree. In today's litigious society any object that you owned, even after it leaves your possession, responsibility stays with you (using the coffee example, the person bought a cup of coffee and took it into her possession. It belonged to her, it was with her in her car, the restaurant transferred ownership to her, but when she spilled it on herself, the restaurant was responsible)...
it’s pretty much unanimous that it a bad ideaQ: Do we all, at the very least, agree that selling your reloads is bad idea?
If they're kin folk then it's okay.Q: Do we all, at the very least, agree that selling your reloads is bad idea?
Q: Do we all, at the very least, agree that selling your reloads is bad idea?
Give them a box and tell your friend he owes you a favor.
Yup. Especially since the OP dropped out at post #17.There are three pages, 58 posts and you can see a consensus ain't gonna happen. There's a lot of "...only if" answers concerning friends, relatives, and selling or gifting. Personally, I shoot my own handloads. I am a solo shooter and don't go for a group of people with guns that I don't know and in 50 years of shooting I've seen too many close calls and just plain morons (not a LEO, and never in combat, but I know what a bullet whizzing by sounds like!), I don't put much stock into any legal opinions set forth by a number of folks not involved in civil law, and for me it's all a non issue.
even after it leaves your possession, responsibility stays with you (
Q: Do we all, at the very least, agree that selling your reloads is bad idea?[/QUOTE
I don’t agree.
If the question is selling your reloads if you’re not a type six or type 7FFL holder a bad idea then answer is yes.
I am in fact awaiting approval on a type 07FFL To manufacture both ammunition and firearms. You are certainly free to disagree with my ideas, but blanket statements such as “that’s a bad idea “ “ you will lose everything “ Are just childish and ridiculous.
I was in the bar business for 25 years, I own led a defense contractor for eight years, that was a prime manufacturing contractor for number of missile programs. I own a rental real estate, everything involves risk. It is up to the risk taker to decide if the reward is worth the risk.
I have my own reasons for entering into manufacturing including profit. If you treat it like a business then there are various ways to mitigate risk, Including ownership structure of your manufacturing entity as well as insurance. Obviously if you’re making a couple of hundred rounds a month your expenses will overwhelm you, making 100,000 rounds a month and you may fare better.
Don’t agree? That’s why they make horse races.
sometimes it’s not about answering the OP question but the spirt of the the questionYup. Especially since the OP dropped out at post #17.
[/QUOTE]I don’t agree.
If the question is selling your reloads if you’re not a type six or type 7FFL holder a bad idea then answer is yes.
I am in fact awaiting approval on a type 07FFL To manufacture both ammunition and firearms. You are certainly free to disagree with my ideas, but blanket statements such as “that’s a bad idea “ “ you will lose everything “ Are just childish and ridiculous.
I was in the bar business for 25 years, I owned a defense contractor for eight years, that was a prime manufacturing contractor for number of missile programs. I own a rental real estate, everything involves risk. It is up to the risk taker to decide if the reward is worth the risk.
I have my own reasons for entering into manufacturing including profit. If you treat it like a business then there are various ways to mitigate risk, Including ownership structure of your manufacturing entity as well as insurance. Obviously if you’re making a couple of hundred rounds a month your expenses will overwhelm you, making 100,000 rounds a month and you may fare better.
Don’t agree? That’s why they make horse races.
Childish and ridiculous you say ? If you don't like what you are reading move on .
No Need to lock anything . All credentials in order . You just don't realize there are folks out there that know what the real deal is and you take offense. That is on you . No need to cry to the mods to lock a thread You disrupted .[/QUOTE]Move on? No, sorry... just don't follow blindly people who have no experience?
What year did you get your FFL? Have you manufactured ammo? Or are you just repeating what the old woman down the lane said?
@Walkalong got it, off topic, feel free to lock it.
Let’s agree to disagree that you two don’t AgreeNo Need to lock anything . All credentials in order . You just don't realize there are folks out there that know what the real deal is and you take offense. That is on you . No need to cry to the mods to lock a thread You disrupted .