TruthTellers
New member
This is probably a common question, sorry if I'm bringing it back up.
This is sort of going to be a part two question that's been spurred by another thread I made. I won't go into the details of that thread, but the question I have is what firearms or replicas of firearms that use fixed ammunition that are classified as antiques if they don't use "fixed ammunition that is readily available through commercial trade"?
I've seen that pretty much any firearm in .32 or .38 Rimfire doesn't require an FFL transfer and some centerfire cartridges also don't require FFL transfers because the ammunition isn't "readily available."
Is there a set list of what's "readily available" or does it change whenever one cartridge is available for sale anywhere in the United States?
This is sort of going to be a part two question that's been spurred by another thread I made. I won't go into the details of that thread, but the question I have is what firearms or replicas of firearms that use fixed ammunition that are classified as antiques if they don't use "fixed ammunition that is readily available through commercial trade"?
I've seen that pretty much any firearm in .32 or .38 Rimfire doesn't require an FFL transfer and some centerfire cartridges also don't require FFL transfers because the ammunition isn't "readily available."
Is there a set list of what's "readily available" or does it change whenever one cartridge is available for sale anywhere in the United States?