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RoadDad

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Everything posted by RoadDad

  1. If you want to maximize your rip-off potential (profit) you should sell it now.
  2. It depends a little on what and how far you will be shooting but in general Improved Cylinder and Cylinder will be fine... some folks use a rifled choke like a Carlson's.
  3. http://shop.carriercomp.com/product.sc?productId=1&categoryId=9 $12.
  4. Wrong. It has everything to do with ITAR and nothing to do with an "excuse" to not ship overseas.
  5. And why would they? Please explain exactly why a small business that sells low volume items would want to get an export license for firearms? It appears that you are unaware of the amount of hassle and paperwork involved and the potential for BigBrother to be sneaking further into your life. Let's see... stacks of paperwork that take hours and days to complete... scrutiny from the State Department... more forms to fill out with each purchase... hours of more hassle dealing with customs... paying brokers... all so you can have a picatinny rail... it makes absolutely no business sense for a low volume small business to hassle with shipping overseas...
  6. Wire transfer $1600 to my Nigerian account and I'll set you right up... I will of course put the excess cash into the box with your goodies and ship it back to you. It's not Sidearmor's excuse not to ship overseas... It's because they don't have an export license. The amount of paperwork to ship any regulated item overseas is just insane... it can get deep enough to sink the cargo ship carrying the goods... State Department has to approve it and issue an export license, etc... you may need a DSP-83 form for each purchase/shipment, etc... PITA for a "small business". Whether you feel it is just "a picatinny rail" or not does not matter, it is still covered by ITAR regulations and shipping it overseas is strictly prohibited without a valid export license issued by the U.S. Department of State, Office of Defense Trade Controls, prescribed in the International Traffic in Arms Regulation (ITAR), Title 22, Code of Federal Regulations, Parts 120-130. ECCN 0A984 – Shotguns, barrel length 18 inches (45.72 cm) or over; buckshot shotgun shells; except equipment used exclusively to treat or tranquilize animals, and except arms designed solely for signal, flare, or saluting use; and parts, not elsewhere specified. - notice the bold is not within the exception clause... Your rail, unfortunately as do all rails, falls within the ITAR regulations. As would a Surefire M80 forend, an M69 rail for a Remington 870, etc. Unless someone on here has the license to ship it to you, I'm not sure you are going to find anyone to help.
  7. lol. I would suggest that you no longer copy and past. I would recommend that copy and paste may work better for you
  8. That's cute... error free spelling from copy and past...
  9. I don't quite get the benelli c-stock pricing... the gb asking prices for the benelli stock are 38-50% of the price of the shotgun... I understand supply and demand but sheesh...
  10. I figure about the same as for much of the rest of us...
  11. They have been back-ordered for months.
  12. Congrats. Glad it came quickly.
  13. My local Gander hasn't gotten a single shipment of Magpul magazines or .223 rounds since they sold out of them right after the election. They did get a shipment of 5.56 Nato tracers from American Eagle that they sold for $20 per box of 20 rounds though. Truck comes in every Wednesday... doors open... flood of customers rush in... and find empty Magpul pegs...
  14. So... a classic case of.... ... me being late to the party
  15. Other than the first two sentences of the description, I don't see it... ?
  16. Better idea may be to have the person you are selling the stock to move out of the state of NY...
  17. Yes... yes... yes... He wants to play with it... Like it's never been fired before? [ATTACH=CONFIG]1942[/ATTACH] I have a flintlock pistol dated between 1645-1660 and have fired it multiple times... value hasn't dropped a cent... Just don't alter the condition of the pistol and the value will not decrease... unless the pistol is rusting and pitted... or is in unusable condition... then get it restored by someone who really knows what they are doing. But if you do fire it before getting it checked for safety/function (assuming you can't do it yourself) and it blows up in your hand it will devalue both the gun and your arm...
  18. Back on topic... JMO here, and it is worth exactly what you paid for it... if you don't need the money, no matter what the value I think you should do this:
  19. Yep... and I sent a 5000 character reply last night... apparently you didn't get it and I didn't realize that I needed to tick the "save a copy to my sent box" before I sent it[ATTACH=CONFIG]1938[/ATTACH] EDIT: Maybe a moderator can dig it out?
  20. Value, like just about anything, is based on the condition of the pistol and market timing. I have seen operable type 14s sell anywhere between $800 to $5200 over the past 5 years or so.
  21. [ATTACH=CONFIG]1935[/ATTACH] No kidding.
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