Posted on 12/18/2013 2:50:09 PM PST by Biggirl
Not because you had a better deal, just to give him something he wanted in exchange for his service.
I am trying to trade it for a double-barreled shotgun
with a barrel length greater than 18 1/2 inches
and an overall length greater than 26 inches.
Two reasons:
1) “Hot load” overpressures barrel, and bad, bulged, used brass blows-up inside barrel. Reloaders don’t always check their used brass carefully. I’ve seen it happen at the range.
2) Glock barrels don’t support ammo properly. News to me. This article details it.
http://www.thegunzone.com/glock/glock-kb2.html
http://www.larrywillis.com/Glock.html
It’d be illegal for me to offer a uniformed officer a handgun, but I could buy him one when he’s off-duty, as a thank you. He’d easily pass the NICS check. If he’s with the Park Rangers tomorrow, I might make him a Kimber offer, as his barracks in here in York.
Good news! I have a serious, qualified buyer for the Farm! My realtor called, and they went before the twp planning commission with engineering plans, and were unanimously and quickly approved and forwarded to next month’s zoning commission hearing, which I’ll attend. I get the escrow deposit check on Friday.
I didn’t realize you can’t when he’s on duty but what’s the difference if you trade him off duty? Is the stupidly named “gun show loophole”, AKA private sales, illegal in PA?
Anyway, great to hear you sold the farm! I thought you already sold it at your auction. Hope that’s better than “you bought the farm”...LOL! Sorry, had to.
I don’t want a .40cal Glock; I have a G23 .357SIG Glock which is faster and I put in a high-end aftermarket barrel. Private sales are legal; I’ve sold several of my dupes and triples off, but handguns have to go thru an FFL. Long guns don’t.
The first auction 12/17/11, was for building contents, machinery, dumptrucks, tools, plants, chemicals, stone, pavers, flagstone, fixtures, displays, benches etc. The property and buildings remain.
The 2nd auction 4/26/13 was a bust and no one met the reserve, so I stopped it.
“Anyway, great to hear you sold the farm!”
The Letter of Intent was signed, escrow check deposited, and next steps will be planning commission mtg, environmental impact studies for new structures/paving, runoff retention and then the presentation for financing of a community park with pools, showers, changing rooms, ballfields, pavilions, concert hall, admin offices, etc. One step at a time.
I ain’t buying any more farms! LOL.
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