-
Contributing Member
Here's my early Savage No4 SKN rifle, I welded up and redressed the fp hole too, as an additional measure.
.303, helping Englishmen express their feelings since 1889
-
Thank You to mrclark303 For This Useful Post:
-
04-02-2020 08:18 AM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
First of all I should like to apologise to "Son" for taking this thread in a somewhat different direction than he first intended.
I am an RFD myself and have had long discussions about weather in particular the SKN armourers sectioned rifles were or were not firearms and whether they should or should not be "deactivated" as defined by what was then UK
firearms law in both pre and post 1996 specifications.
I know that this a VERY grey area with strong opinions held on either side, I was told by one of the friends I shoot with that an SKN sectioned No4 was used to fire blanks for sound effects during various school plays so they could at least be made to go bang if nothing else.
This however is NOT the point that I was trying to make, after the terrible terrorist shootings in France
a few years ago it was discovered that the weapons used had been so badly deactivated that it took minimal effort to restore them to a serviceable condition, it was at this point the bureaucrats of the EU stepped in.
They decided in their infinite wisdom that they would come up with their own deactivation specification that would apply across the EU regardless of what was already in place in the member states, the various bodies here in the UK tried unsuccessfully to point out the specification here in the UK was as good as what they were proposing but to no avail.
A directive was issued that stated that ANY deactivated rifle that did not meet their new specification it would be deemed to be "defectively deactivated" and could not be sold, given or lent unless it was brought up to the new spec, you could however keep it.
This last bit meant that people who had spent quite large sums on both pre and post 1996 specification deactivated rifles would now see the value of their collections vastly reduced overnight without the need for any form of compensation.
As I pointed out in my original post the No5 in question was a firearm when it was sectioned, not an SKN training aid, and therefore it would if held in the UK or any other part of the EU would deemed to be defectively deactivated and could not be sold. The EU directive was not interested in whether it was or was not a firearm in a former life or whether common sense would say that a rifle sectioned in that could of course never been fired, if it did not meet their specification then it failed.
This is why when I asked the proof master at the Birmingham proof house if my sectioned No4 could by all common sense be deemed to be deactivated I was told that it wasn't because of the way that the directive had been worded.
I read with some amusement the accounts of some people buying skeletonized rifles from an RFD auction house having been told that they could sell them "off ticket", if it is the one I am thinking about then they have something of a reputation of being rather generous with their descriptions, a little like the description of the Long Branch sniper rifle with the Griffin & Howe mount that is being discussed at the moment.
I guess that we can chew the fat on this subject until the cows come home and until someone ends up in a court somewhere or we eventually leave the EU and manage to return to some form of sanity we will not see this mess cleared up.
-
The Following 4 Members Say Thank You to Buccaneer For This Useful Post:
-
-
Paul, it might be a slight over simplification, but it's close enough: the EU parliament (democratically elected like our own, & at the time containing UK
MEP's) came up with the 2016 EU standards, which were not vastly different to existing UK standards, & which I found quite acceptable in my limited involvement with rifle deacts. They were essentially our specs just tweaked enough to claim that they were 'EU standard'. I understand that the EU Commission (a totally different & unelected body) leapt in late on & with some deft footwork changed things to the current monstrous specs that we have now, the EU 2018 specifications. It will be interesting to see what the UK government do when the transitional period is over. Personally I don't think it's going to be the 'patriot's paradise' that many hope for.
P.S. Sorry Son, back to your No5!
-
The Following 3 Members Say Thank You to Roger Payne For This Useful Post:
-
Contributing Member
Back to the No5, I would love it, certainly very nicely done.
-
Thank You to mrclark303 For This Useful Post:
-
Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Buccaneer
This is why when I asked the proof master at the Birmingham proof house if my sectioned No4 could by all common sense be deemed to be deactivated I was told that it wasn't because of the way that the directive had been worded.
I think that the confusion is partly (totally) down to the UK
Government who (on their website) as late as the end of 2019 have said :
Section 8 of the 1988 Act is an evidential provision and does not preclude the possibility
that a firearm which has been de-activated in some other manner may also have ceased
to be a firearm within the meaning of the 1968 Act. For example, guns held by museums
that were recovered from wrecked ships and aircraft may be corroded to the point that
they cannot be fired. This should not be confused with wear or missing parts that can be
replaced. The final arbiter of whether the article fulfils the definition of a firearm at section
57(1) is a court.
Does the EU ever moving goal posts override the 1968 Act ? (the Government seem to think not)
Mine are not the best, but they are not too bad. I can think of lots of Enfields I'd rather have but instead of constantly striving for more, sometimes it's good to be satisfied with what one has...
-
Thank You to Alan de Enfield For This Useful Post: