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Can they video tape it since we all can't watchPart of me is tempted to call one of my cop buddies and see if, since a DIAS is legally a machinegun by itself, they might be interested in setting up a sting...
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Can they video tape it since we all can't watchPart of me is tempted to call one of my cop buddies and see if, since a DIAS is legally a machinegun by itself, they might be interested in setting up a sting...
Some guys I work with were saying that too when I showed it to them. I wonder, has anyone ever heard of them actually doing something like this? The auto sear is a laugh. I would be shocked if anyone actually would give him that or even close to it for it. First you can't use it in this state anyway. Second if someone from a state that could bought it and tried to register it to use I am 99.999% sure the ATF would at best just tell them no.Or, it could be law enforcement fishing.
It was legal. The way the BATF went after it was after a few fits and starts. They decided that having the parts to make a machine gun constituted having a machine gun. So if you had a sear you had to paper it. This was when you still could. This clown is begging to get a visit.Before 1981 it was legal to make and own these sears without having to declare your AR15 to be a "machine gun".
At least that is my imperfect understanding.
I may be totally wrong about this ...as it is information regarding a gun without a ramrod or one that does not load from the muzzle...
Andy
Has anybody firgured out the difference between a sear made before 1981 vs. the later?
My question is, what is the physical difference between a sear made prior to 1981 vs. one made after 1981? Well I guess that is not quite correct. What is the difference of a sear made prior to 1981 Vs a sear made today?
Assuming this idiot really does "think" he can sell this it may be the C&R thing. He may have "heard" the if it's over 50 it's a C&R eligible. Or something along those lines. Then someone convinced him he can now sell it? who knows. You do still see some really great stuff when it comes to guns. People listen to what someone tells them to their peril.Who would pay $8K for something you can make with a bandsaw... lol.
Regarding antiques... a firearm that originally used black powder or one made to replicate one from that era.
Vaquero.... nope.
At this point in time The only way I would even think about touching one of these is if it was numbered and papered already. Anyone playing with these is just begging for all kinds of grief.
A legal papered one will cost anywhere from $12,000.000 to $15,000.00 because of the limited quantity of legal ones.
Part of me is tempted to call one of my cop buddies and see if, since a DIAS is legally a machinegun by itself, they might be interested in setting up a sting...
Don't bother - I am sure anything that this guy has for sale doesn't even exist, at least not in his possession anyway. Just a scam to get your money.
The guy probably doesn't even live in Washington state, maybe not even the USA