Phazer
.450/400 Nitro Ex
That'll make a nice demonstration in court.600 degree heat will get the cap off with no damage to the threads.
With a pin, they'd have to drill it out. Just saying.
That'll make a nice demonstration in court.600 degree heat will get the cap off with no damage to the threads.
With a pin, they'd have to drill it out. Just saying.
It could be done in a crime lab and afterwards just shown to a jury. See! It comes off and on! Screw on, screw off.That'll make a nice demonstration in court.
Point taken.It could be done in a crime lab and afterwards just shown to a jury. See! It comes off and on! Screw on, screw off.
But wait a minute your honor. On the other barrel that I got arrested for that was pinned and welded via the ATF method, I notice it now has holes in both the cap and barrel. You had to drill it out!
Just saying. I like arguing.
I'm driving up with it to Collector and ask them.
Hard to comply with a law that is so vague.
I see it differently. In my opinion, it's easier to have definitions.very wrong. it is VERY easy to comply with a vague law. vague is what we want. you can never be convicted with vague.
They can say you have threads under the steel on your plain barrel too. Just let me run this die down the outside and they'll magically appear.But why would they say that if the goal was to prosecute you? They'd be better off not saying anything and just saying that you have threads under that cap.
If the barrel is 16.12" per Ruger's specs, I assume that is measured to the end of the threads and not the end of the flash suppressor, correct?
Unless the flash suppressor is permanently attached it better be, or you have an unregistered SBR.If the barrel is 16.12" per Ruger's specs, I assume that is measured to the end of the threads and not the end of the flash suppressor, correct?
You would still have threads under a pinned and welded cap.I hear you. However they can argue that since you have threads under the cap, it still is a threaded barrel with just a cap over it.