That'll buff right out
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Wenol works wonders!!
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I picked up a Uberti 1860 Colt Army with a shoulder stock. The revolver came with a 45 Colt conversion cylinder, so I'm waiting till I get my percussion cylinder in before I use the stock with it. It is a fast change from cartridge to percussion, but you have to remember to never use the shoulder stock with the conversion cylinder because feds will rule that an SBR under the NFA - 5 years flat time.
https://i.ibb.co/ydC01Rc/1860-army-conversion-edit.jpg |
Doesn't the pistol become a weapon with the cartridge cylinder?
Or are they black powder cartridges? Does it matter? It would for me. As a felon I can have a percussion gun like in your pic. But I'm wondering about black powder cartridges? BTW, a good judge will go below federal guidelines. Mine did.:D |
its not considered a weapon untill you put on the Percussion caps
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When I put the conversion cylinder in it for 45 Colt, it is classified as a modern revolver. When I have the percussion cylinder in it, it is an antique firearm not subject to regulation. If you have a cartridge firing gun, including machine guns, made before 1899 it is an antique firearm and not subject to regulation. I know many people with priors who shoot percussion and flintlock guns. The only hitch is if your state has a prohibition.
For the purposes of the National Firearms Act, the term “Antique Firearms” means any firearm not intended or redesigned for using rim fire or conventional center fire ignition with fixed ammunition and manufactured in or before 1898 (including any matchlock, flintlock, percussion cap or similar type of ignition system or replica thereof, whether actually manufactured before or after the year 1898) and also any firearm using fixed ammunition manufactured in or before 1898, for which ammunition is no longer manufactured in the United States and is not readily available in the ordinary channels of commercial trade http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/browse/coll...011&ycord=1419 |
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Station Wagons as tools of war...
Attachment 68017 Keaton had a tough time in WW I, they moved him from infantry to signal corps but he was under 5'5" and wore a 6 1/2 shoe. They couldn't even come close, 8 1/2 was the smallest shoe and coats like tents. |
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The French seemed to think no one would notice a man dressed like a tank moving around. :rolleyes:
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Imagine the pranks Mel Brooks coulda pulled off if'n he'd had one of those!
Mel crawled across no-man's-land with a giant speaker, and climbed the only tree (mighta been a pole) left standing, hung the speaker pointed at the Nazis, and hooked it up to a record player and played, I think, Jewish folk songs all night. What? Your gov't didn't issue record players to front line troops?:eyebrow: |
Imagen the clatter in seide that thing from the gun shots
Think golf driving range tractor |
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Knee propelled, no pads.
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They were preconditioned with wine since they didn't have to stand up, let alone walk, and the racket kept them from falling asleep. Ingenious!
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