Nice bit of info there. Didn't have a clue that fully auto firearms weren't being made any more. Makes sense thoughNo. The only tax is a $200 tax stamp. That's it. The rest is just market demand. A $400 gun in 1986 is now worth over $5k, just because no new machine guns can be sold to peasants. Any modifying can cost you 10 years in club fed, per offense. The rest of your post is also gibberish.
You guys sound like grade school kids.Was actually talking to the dude at the store today, all you need is a $250 license to own fully auto weapons.
Couple p90s and a f2000
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Meh, buying them off the street with the serial numbers filed off is easier.......You guys sound like grade school kids.
No. You cannot get p90's and f2000's full auto. No. There is no such thing as a "license" for full auto. Dealers have a class 3 license to sell them. You don't need or get one. It's a $200 tax stamp. Just like the tax stamp on a box of cigarettes. You need one for each machine gun. Only this one you have to apply for first, with a background check and your local LEO signoff. The machine guns must have been made and legally registered before 1986. After that it's only LEO and military. You cannot buy machine guns made after 1986. That's why a $400 Mac 11 sells for over $4,000 and a M2 goes for over $100,000. The tax stamp is still only $200.
Full auto are common and legal (in most states), if you're not an idiot and can read simple rules. Most of you won't qualify, simply because you can't figure out how to tie your shoes, much less apply for a federal tax stamp.
Maybe if you think 10 years in federal pound you in the *** prison is easier? Never seen full auto on the street. Street rats wouldn't know the difference between a full auto and an airsoft.Meh, buying them off the street with the serial numbers filed off is easier.......
It shall be unlawful for any person knowingly to transport,
ship, or receive, in interstate or foreign commerce, any firearm which
has had the importer's or manufacturer's serial number removed,
obliterated, or altered or to possess or receive any firearm which has
had the importer's or manufacturer's serial number removed, obliterated,
or altered and has, at any time, been shipped or transported in
interstate or foreign commerce.