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It looks like they did not have to "Dremel" the V series, if I am seeing it right. If true, and if this is really a "drop in" full auto device then this does seem to put them right back to square one.

This would allow Glock to show that they *did* try, but I don't know if that is enough to stop all the lawsuits.

It might actually help Glock if *they* come up with switches for lots of other guns. This would show that it is not a Glock specific issue.

I want a fully auto cap and ball revolver.
 
Or just refuse to sell in blue states. That's what I would do if they wanna continue to sue. That includes refusing to sell to cops and .gov agencies.
I get it, but what does even a small government contract pay? I know from dealing with software, you have to pay for every little licensing detail. The government buyer doesn't care because tax money, Monopoly money is all the same. Free.

Also, who is designing the "switch"? China is the distributor, I suppose. But who designed and marketed it?
 
I get it, but what does even a small government contract pay? I know from dealing with software, you have to pay for every little licensing detail. The government buyer doesn't care because tax money, Monopoly money is all the same. Free.

Also, who is designing the "switch"? China is the distributor, I suppose. But who designed and marketed it?
They won't do it. Money is the number 1 driving factor. Principles don't matter.
 
I get it, but what does even a small government contract pay? I know from dealing with software, you have to pay for every little licensing detail. The government buyer doesn't care because tax money, Monopoly money is all the same. Free.

Also, who is designing the "switch"? China is the distributor, I suppose. But who designed and marketed it?
Jorge Leon of Venezuela, invented it in 1987, and patented in 1996. Patent expired 2016 though. He intended the system to be for police and military to convert normal Glocks into machine pistols for use with police and military :rolleyes: because the patent expired, it opened the floodgates for people to copy and modify the design for a variety of similar handguns

 
all-of-this-was-for-nothing-v0-vo0p39ewq12g1.jpg
 

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