Posted on 11/29/2015 9:19:21 PM PST by RC one
On Thursday, October 22, Rep. Matt Salmon (R-AZ) introduced H.R. 3799, the Hearing Protection Act (HPA) along with 10 co-sponsors, including Representatives Frank Guinta (R-NH), John Carter (R-TX), Mike Kelly (R-PA), Chris Collins (R-NY), Glenn Thompson (R-PA), Tim Huelskamp (R-KS), Trent Franks (R-AZ), Mia Love (R-UT), Doug LaMalfa (R-CA), and Chris Stewart (R-UT). The HPA would remove silencers from regulation under the National Firearms Act (NFA), leaving them to be treated as ordinary firearms subject to the usual NICS check and Form 4473 for dealer sales.
Currently, silencers are subject to the NFA process with âCLEO sign-off,â a 4 to 14 month wait and a $200 tax. In and of itself a silencer is completely harmless.
Their primary function is to reduce the sound signature of the firearm to which they are attached, protecting the hearing of the shooter and reducing noise and disturbance to those close by.
Although they have been subject to heightened regulation under federal law since 1934, silencers have become increasingly popular in recent years, as more and more hunters and firearm enthusiasts have discovered their benefits.
The process has been made incredibly easy the past few years by a company known as silencershop.com who is like the Amazon.com of the NFA world. As a distributor they keep a huge variety of silencers in inventory and can help buyers establish a trust if they need it. Simply order on line, pay forit and select a local dealer to have the item delivered once the paperwork clears.
To ensure the possibility of passage of the HPA does not discourage people from exercising their rights to acquire silencers in the meantime, the Act would allow those who buy one after October 22, 2015, but before the Actâs effective date, to obtain a refund of the NFAâs $200 tax.
(Excerpt) Read more at examiner.com ...
nice nice nice. I have the black threaded 22/45 with upper and lower rails. It will soon have a huntertown arms suppressor on it and I’ll probably do a laser on the lower rail. It’s not my good old trusty Mark II but it should make those night shots easier.
I would think that anyone who has invested that kind of coin into a firearm would be disinclined to see their investment lose all of its value. Maybe I’m wrong though.
I’d like to put a lower rail on mine for the same reason. Makes those low light shots at rabbits in the garden easier, and a laser sure helps if one finds themself having to make a shot while laying down on one’s side.
Not your problem...any descent website autimatically fixes size so this doesn’t happen. I have my own website. If you had posted your pic there. It would have been 750 pixels wide...auto sized for our forum. I’ve written FR over and over on this subject ...last time got a reply of “if up you used a real computer you wouldn’t have the problem!” I’m still waiting for an apology. (An anti-Apple mod Jim allows to hang around). I had offered a fix and that’s the response I got. This problem can be fixed quickly, but nobody listens.
People buy in knowing that it is a possibility to have this overturned. How is the 86 law in any way Constitutional or just when it bans the manufacture of FA guns forever for civilians? So in 100 years they can hope to acquire a pile of rust?
It needs to be overturned and is the one disgraceful thing that Ronald Reagan did.
BTW, maybe Obama would overturn the 86 law if someone whispered in his hear that by doing so he would be “sticking it to gun owners”
Oh, that’s it, I hate you!
Nice piece, mine has a 2x scope but no muffler.
and then at 6:44 the recorded vote is submitted and the hughes amendment was shot down 297 votes to 124 yet managed to get on the bill anyways and then signed by Ronald Reagan.
With the proliferation of display devices, screens now come in a wide variety of sizes and aspect ratios. The image below illustrates the range of screens possible. Differing aspect ratios are shown on the diagonal lines with the ratio in circles towards the lower right.
Given the wide variation in screen resolution and size when we step from mobi to fondleslab to display to HDTV it is lunacy to specify screen position in term of pixels. There is no way to know what sized screen you are imaging to so it is best to reference screen sizes and positions in percentages instead. The resulting size is the percentage of the width (or height) of the enclosing container. This is most useful when specifying positions and sizes of tables and images. The HTML for the image above looks like:
<img src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/44/Vector_Video_Standards5.svg" width="95%">
The
width="95%"
part sets the image width to 95% of the width of the enclosing container. We leave the height unspecified so that the computer will figure out the correct value so as not to distort the image. If you wish to distort the image you may specify a height as well.Things that are text related, such as the whitespace around a paragraph or header and text sizes are best specified in
em
. Oneem
was originally the width of an M in the current font. In a multi-lingual world where not all alphabets have an M in them, the meaning has evolved to mean the height of the current font. As the user changes the magnification on a page the size of anem
changes with it. This produces a pleasing scaled effect to the eye not possible when spacing objects in pixels.Other unit values available are
in
inch,cm
centimeter,mm
millimeter,ex
x-height of a font (x-height is usually about half the font-size),pt
point - 1/72 of an inch,pc
pica - 12 points andpx
pixels - a single dot on the screen. If no units are specified pixels are used by default. Best results across the broad spectrum of displays are achieved by exclusively using em and percent to specify size and distance. Try not to do anything else.
Freedom ≠ Free Stuff☭ | ||
I, for one, welcome our new Cybernetic Overlords /. | ||
|
“Oh, thatâs it, I hate you!
Nice piece, mine has a 2x scope but no muffler.”
lol! I haven’t even broken her in yet. My heavy barreled all stainless Mark 2 is going to get jealous. May have to keep them in seperate cabinets.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.