So if you contact ATF and do whatever paperwork is required to get a serial number assigned (and I would think engraved into the gun) then it would be legal to sell across state lines? Sure sounds like more of a PITA that most people would not be wanting to go through. But good to know just the same.jjk308 wrote: ↑Mon Jul 23, 2018 7:26 amThe ATF has a procedure for serial nos for homebuilts. And BTW there are a lot of guns, made before 1967, without serial numbers and its legal to sell them across state lines.gforester wrote: ↑Sat Jul 21, 2018 2:15 pm I would think that selling your used home built gun to a resident of the same state IS legal. Selling it to someone across state lines would be illegal. When a firearm crosses a state line it has to go to an FFL and go through the BGC process with an ATF form 4473 and that cannot be done if there is no serial number. Just IMHO but I am no expert on the law.
Ghost guns win .gov approval!!!
- NorincoKid
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Not sure.gforester wrote: ↑Mon Jul 23, 2018 8:20 amSo if you contact ATF and do whatever paperwork is required to get a serial number assigned (and I would think engraved into the gun) then it would be legal to sell across state lines? Sure sounds like more of a PITA that most people would not be wanting to go through. But good to know just the same.
Alot of the time, on other forums etc, when someone sells a gun built from a unfinished receiver (flat, casting etc) they cut it in half. IE, its a kit again. Probably cause its not worth the trouble figuring out the laws.
Common for AK's. A complete, headspaced kit goes for about the same as a whole gun anyways.
They are costing themselves a lot of money. All the law requires is a serial number (your own) A maker ID of some sort and the city and state it was made in. The ATF doesn't assign serial numbers so make up your own. They may have had plans to do so at one time but apparently gave it up rather than produce new forms and keep the records.NorincoKid wrote: ↑Mon Jul 23, 2018 12:46 pmNot sure.gforester wrote: ↑Mon Jul 23, 2018 8:20 amSo if you contact ATF and do whatever paperwork is required to get a serial number assigned (and I would think engraved into the gun) then it would be legal to sell across state lines? Sure sounds like more of a PITA that most people would not be wanting to go through. But good to know just the same.
Alot of the time, on other forums etc, when someone sells a gun built from a unfinished receiver (flat, casting etc) they cut it in half. IE, its a kit again. Probably cause its not worth the trouble figuring out the laws.
Common for AK's. A complete, headspaced kit goes for about the same as a whole gun anyways.
BTW just sawing a receiver in half does NOT meet the legal requirements for demiling so they are violating the law while trying to go beyond their real legal requirements!
http://www.hoffmang.com/firearms/BATFE- ... -11-09.pdf
https://regulations.atf.gov/478-92/2016-12100#478-92
- NorincoKid
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Out of curiosity, i did find this;
https://www.atf.gov/firearms/docs/undef ... f/download
That seems to be directly about handguns and bolt action rifles, so definitely not geared towards MG's. Perhaps its changed?
The stuff you posted was geared towards machine gun, and importation etc.
As of awhile back, even for police dept confiscations getting destroyed, etc, a single cut was acceptable.
https://www.atf.gov/firearms/docs/undef ... f/download
That seems to be directly about handguns and bolt action rifles, so definitely not geared towards MG's. Perhaps its changed?
The stuff you posted was geared towards machine gun, and importation etc.
As of awhile back, even for police dept confiscations getting destroyed, etc, a single cut was acceptable.
That's correct - AK trophies I saw brought back from Somalia had 3 torch cuts at an angle across the receiver. A PD might ignore a single cut and the ATF would probably just tell you to do it right, but it's still a silly overreaction.
- Dr. Dickie
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Pretty easy to put a serial number on the gun.gforester wrote: ↑Sat Jul 21, 2018 2:15 pm I would think that selling your used home built gun to a resident of the same state IS legal. Selling it to someone across state lines would be illegal. When a firearm crosses a state line it has to go to an FFL and go through the BGC process with an ATF form 4473 and that cannot be done if there is no serial number. Just IMHO but I am no expert on the law.
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