-
Contributing Member
In the UK
you need to be a member of a club and after about 6 months you can get your firearms certificate.
Your family doctor will also be contacted to make sure you are not known to be unstable, drug addicted, etc.
Now, I was at Bisley shooting today and I was literally the only person shooting at the huge range - just because it was raining.
IMHO there are 3 main reasons why so few people shoot or collect firearms in the UK:
(1) In the first place, they aren't interested.
(2) In the second place, they can't be bothered with the [entirely achievable] paperwork / bureaucracy and the 6 months wait.
(3) In the third place, they weren't interested in the first place.
Rob
-
Thank You to RobD For This Useful Post:
-
08-02-2017 04:14 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Some of the above forgot to mention Section 7.1 and 7.3...... which I highly recommend....... (only just started with Sec 7.1 myself but quite a quick and painless process to be honest) only downside to this is it has changed my future collecting habits slightly..............
-
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed

Originally Posted by
BruceHMX
Congrats on a nice find. That gal has had an interesting life. Made in the US, then shipped to somewhere in the
UK
, finds it's way back to the US via Century Arms. Finally makes her way back to the UK. How cool is that!
Yes, I thought that when I saw the CAI stamp! I assume CAI wouldn't have imported it back to the UK when they were "handed back" to the US? (the CAI stamp is much later yes?)
-
Legacy Member
Correct but how it made it's way back to the UK
is a real mystery. I doubt the rifle was returned to the US under Lend Lease agreement. Was probably imported in the late 80's or 90's to Century Arms when they were still in Vermont.
-
-
Advisory Panel
I exported quite a few, (hundreds), of No.4 rifles back to the UK
in the past 10-15 years. It could be one of those.
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Do you keep records :-D 65C8920
On my rifle, the "B" under the serial is the inspection mark in Britain
before it would have gone into service yes?
-
Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
bigduke6
Some of the above forgot to mention Section 7.1 and 7.3...... which I highly recommend....... (only just started with Sec 7.1 myself but quite a quick and painless process to be honest) only downside to this is it has changed my future collecting habits slightly..............
In my previous post I said that cartridge loaded handguns were difficult. Without mentioning it I was referring to Section 7 of the Firearms act. I have had pistols under section 7/1 since it came out. When the law changed I had, and still have, a serious collection of Colts. I still have most of them and the only difference is that I can't shoot them.
The image shows just one of my 3 cabinets of Colts.
Last edited by Stanforth; 08-04-2017 at 05:58 AM.
-
The Following 5 Members Say Thank You to Stanforth For This Useful Post:
-
Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Stanforth
The image shows just one of my 3 cabinets of Colts.
Those are nice guns Geoff...you know we'd love to see some of those close up too?
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Does anyone know the background on the proof marks my rifle has on the muzzle? Would that be a normal place to stamp? It's an NP stamp, which is London Proof House I believe, is that normal on a US rifle; or has mine been re-barrelled possibly?
-
Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
roundyuk
Would that be a normal place to stamp?
All firearms leaving the UK
had to have those proofhouse inspections. That's a normal mark. They aren't done by the US.
-