Removing the barrel and sending it back to the factory for reloading IS NOT A TEETHING PROBLEM. That's exactly how the system was designed. It can't be reloaded by the owner.
You got that?
Now I'm going to ask you again. Would you but a gun that after shooting had to be send back to the factory just so you could use it again?
{Removing the barrel and sending it back to the factory for reloading IS NOT A TEETHING PROBLEM.}
It is if the process is difficult, since it will eventually be easy. How many gas stations were there when automobiles first hit the road?
Hell n tarnation, were outa gas and there aint another gas pump for nigh on two hundred miles. Whyd I ever give up my horse?
Things get better. We used to crank engines to start them, now we just speak a word.
{That's exactly how the system was designed. It can't be reloaded by the owner.}
Who would want to reload million-bullet barrels? I would gladly let the factory robot do it, thanks. In the same way I take the jet to the airport mechanic for a service, and to the fuel hanger for refuelling. Do I want to refuel her myself, at home, from 44 gallon drums of jet fuel and a hand pump? No thanks. Many things go somewhere to be serviced, refilled or tuned. Inconvenient? Thats life. It will be easier with time, since greater demand creates added drop-off points, deliveries, cheaper costs, etc. Empty chambers will be picked up and dropped off as easily as beer kegs are, behind every hotel, every day. Not a drama.
{Now I'm going to ask you again. Would you but a gun that after shooting had to be send back to the factory just so you could use it again?}
Sure, along with my car for a service, my computer for repairs, my gas cylinders for refilling, my jet for refueling, my robots for de-bugging and my bonsai collection for trimming.