August 12th, 2007, 22:09 | #61 |
Official Crybaby Chairsofter
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I'm pretty sure it has to be both, altho iv been told etheir one = firearm. but you will see pellet guns that are sold that have +500fps but under the joule speed and you don't need a firearm license.
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August 12th, 2007, 22:45 | #62 |
Any pellet guns over 500 FPS need a PAL. Otherwise the business selling them is doing so illegally.
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August 12th, 2007, 22:47 | #63 |
After rereading the hansard on that particular amendment, it looks like I'm wrong and ancorp and Drake are right. Really crappily written law, if I have to dig up hearing records to see that.
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"The Bird of Hermes is My Name, Eating My Wings to Make Me Tame." |
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August 13th, 2007, 05:39 | #64 | |
E-01
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Quote:
Quick muzzle energy calculation yields 5.95j at the muzzle. (for 7.9gr @ 500fps) Common .22 cal pellets are in usually in the neighborhood of 14 gr and are over the 5.7j limit well before 500 fps (360 fps for a 14.6gr pellet, to be precise). I highly doubt the 5.7j limit was chosen arbitrarily.
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Last edited by Drake; August 13th, 2007 at 05:41.. |
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August 13th, 2007, 12:43 | #65 |
AK Guru
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I believe the law was updated from just 500fps to both due to light pellets that came out, that would put a 500fps gun over the FPS limit but not the energy limit. Unfortunately that only works for .177, not .22. I never did understand.
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August 13th, 2007, 12:50 | #66 |
Yeah, they tacked on a muzzle energy limit to protect airguns from having to be registered because of the light-weight pelletes. I don't think the people making the decision fully comprehended all the technical issues involved, and the witnesses from the shooting interests didn't bother to oblige them.
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"The Bird of Hermes is My Name, Eating My Wings to Make Me Tame." |
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August 13th, 2007, 15:14 | #67 | |
Quote:
under the Criminal code.. wrong... either exceed the FPS OR exceed the energy, then firearm (restricted) under the Firearms Act, both FPS AND energy need to be exceeded then its a firearm That is why markers can be imported cuz their firearms under the Criminal Code (but not a firearm under the Firearms Act) so they can't be replicas.... If airsoft guns can shoot high FPS (say like pellet guns) but still have low energy, then its a firearm under the Criminal Code, but not a firearm under the Firearms Act... this will put them in the same category as pellet guns, and may likely remove the classification of replicas.... Last edited by Capt. T/O; August 13th, 2007 at 15:19.. |
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