
Or maybe not so pew pew. It sounds more like a nail gun.
Yes, this is my newest acquisition, a Silencerco Osprey! It goes quite well is my .45 H&K USP Tactical. :)
I felt compulsed to share this, because, well, I don't see a whole lot of this on this site, and I'm reaching out and am curious who else has such toys. :)
Yes, this is my newest acquisition, a Silencerco Osprey! It goes quite well is my .45 H&K USP Tactical. :)
I felt compulsed to share this, because, well, I don't see a whole lot of this on this site, and I'm reaching out and am curious who else has such toys. :)
Category Photography / Miscellaneous
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1280 x 960px
File Size 432.4 kB
Silencers are usually made out of lightweight but hardened aluminum so they don't have very much weight to them.
I've thought about getting my Glock done up with a silencer adapter on it when I get the coating on the slide redone, but I don't think I will cause my holster isn't long enough since it's a concealed carry weapon lol
I've thought about getting my Glock done up with a silencer adapter on it when I get the coating on the slide redone, but I don't think I will cause my holster isn't long enough since it's a concealed carry weapon lol
I grew up with all kinds of guns. First one I ever shot when I was ten was a 12 gauge shotgun. Then started with a lever action 22 for accuracy before just moving up the line of calibers.
My concealed carry is a Model 21, 45 cal Glock. I should carry something smaller but where I broke my right hand (dominant hand and firing hand), I can't handle smaller handled guns easily.
My concealed carry is a Model 21, 45 cal Glock. I should carry something smaller but where I broke my right hand (dominant hand and firing hand), I can't handle smaller handled guns easily.
Good looking suppressor. Does it go on with one turn?
I have things, but they're old. A few different 7.62 toys, all firing different rounds.
Ooh, look here: https://i.ytimg.com/vi/umzYPNYjEiY/.....resdefault.jpg
I have things, but they're old. A few different 7.62 toys, all firing different rounds.
Ooh, look here: https://i.ytimg.com/vi/umzYPNYjEiY/.....resdefault.jpg
It depends on the state you live in! Most allow them, nowadays, with some exception.
There are resources for stores in your area that sell them, so Google helps on that.
Basically, you purchase the suppressor, fill out the paperwork, and pay a $200 tax stamp. Wait a few months (took me 6) and then you can take it home!
There are resources for stores in your area that sell them, so Google helps on that.
Basically, you purchase the suppressor, fill out the paperwork, and pay a $200 tax stamp. Wait a few months (took me 6) and then you can take it home!
What Whiro said! It's mostly paperwork and heaps and heaps of waiting (8 months for me). The tricky part for me is that you have to get the local sheriff of your county to sign a form saying that they have no reason to believe that you're a criminal. My local police department had a grand old time giving me the runaround on this, and it took a few trips making myself a nuisance until they signed it to make me go away.
The trick is that, by the way the National Firearms Act is written, the sheriff is under no obligation to actually fill out this form, even if you have no background problems. In this way, if the local sheriff wants to be a jerk, then they can establish a sort of de facto ban on suppressor ownership without having to have an actual law. There's supposedly a legal way around this by establishing some kind of trust or something, but I didn't have to take this route so I'm not that familiar with it.
A good dealer will help you through the process, and there's lots of helpful information online about how to do it
Edit: Also, you have to repeat this process for every single device, every single time it's transferred. Start the process on every one you might want, or you'll be waiting a loooong time.
The trick is that, by the way the National Firearms Act is written, the sheriff is under no obligation to actually fill out this form, even if you have no background problems. In this way, if the local sheriff wants to be a jerk, then they can establish a sort of de facto ban on suppressor ownership without having to have an actual law. There's supposedly a legal way around this by establishing some kind of trust or something, but I didn't have to take this route so I'm not that familiar with it.
A good dealer will help you through the process, and there's lots of helpful information online about how to do it
Edit: Also, you have to repeat this process for every single device, every single time it's transferred. Start the process on every one you might want, or you'll be waiting a loooong time.
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