I like to touch them before buying. Some of them are essentially filing cabinets with pin striping. My dad has a display case so all guns must be individually secured (trigger lock, removed bolt stored elsewhere etc). Ammo is in a separate locked compartment. While things are legally locked up, entry could be achieved in seconds.I need to buy a 10 gun safe as a Christmas gift for a new shooter. Looking for suggestions on units and mandatory features.
Want to meet legal requirements for safe storage. Fort Knox protection from theft is not required.
He has 4 long and a couple of hand guns.
If you bolt it to a wall the Crappy Tire locker style are ok. Definitely not Fort Knox but then again it will deter a casual thief but not a determined one and it depends on what general home security is like. You can get a fair amount in there. Get shelf hangers for handguns (Amazon). Poly covered rods go into the barrels and they hang from there. Trigger locked and inside the cabinet will satisfy regs. Good news with these is they are light enough to put in upper floors and in closets as opposed to some of the gargantuan safes that weigh literally tons that are going to perhaps limit you to downstairs rooms, or even worse, a garage.I need to buy a 10 gun safe as a Christmas gift for a new shooter. Looking for suggestions on units and mandatory features.
Want to meet legal requirements for safe storage. Fort Knox protection from theft is not required.
He has 4 long and a couple of hand guns.
Most modern revolvers (and modern replicas) have a transfer bar that requires the trigger to be pulled in order to reveal the end of the firing pin for the hammer to strike so you can’t just let the hammer down (finger off the trigger) or drop it to get it to fire. However, if it’s an antique or an authentic replica of an old Wild West gun then all bets are off. My Ruger Blackhawk is one of the simplest but also the safest handguns I own, it’s a single action revolver, you need to cock the hammer AND pull the trigger for it to fire. The only iffy procedure would be decocking the hammer on a loaded cylinder but you’d have to be a bit of a knob to do that unsafely and you wouldn’t point it at anyone while you do it.In the interview he says he was cocking the trigger back and when he let it go the gun fired.... he didn't "pull the trigger" but has zero understanding how a firearm works and his ignorance got someone killed.
Can someone explain the process for getting a PAL these days? My FAC expired in the 80's, and I believe I'll be treated like any other noob, correct?
Any difference between course providers (price, online option, etc.)?
Is the student manual optional? It says to purchase and read BEFORE the course?
When I had my FAC, it was really tough to get the restricted permit - you needed to already be a member of a club and know a range marshal that would vouch for you. Is it now just a matter of passing the CFRSC?
Living in Peel in the 80's... I'd just go buy a pistol, take it to the police stn., see the firearms officer and register it.
Hell... the police used to sell off their surplus revolvers... 'Bought one from them in '86
H
The second part of your post is odd.
There never was such a thing as a "permit" for a restricted firearm...
All you needed was the FAC. The only difference was that you had to register the restricted firearm.
The rest of your post... Seems like it all depended on where you lived.
Toronto had different requirements than say Peel region...
Living in Peel in the 80's... I'd just go buy a pistol, take it to the police stn., see the firearms officer and register it.
Hell... the police used to sell off their surplus revolvers... 'Bought one from them in '86
H
Whatever it was called, all I remember was not being able to purchase anything with a barrel shorter than a certain length without it. All the gun stores told me that same story, such as Giovanni's and Ontario Sporting Supplies. I was ready to buy an HK94 carbine, but they said it was too short to sell to me, but they could weld a flash suppressor to the end of the barrel to make it long enough.
So this is no longer a thing? Just take both courses and I can buy whatever I want? Any other permits or anything needed to transport it from the store to home, or back and forth to a club?
I got my FAC and guns a long time ago, never bothered with a PAL, suppose I should do that.Whatever it was called, all I remember was not being able to purchase anything with a barrel shorter than a certain length without it. All the gun stores told me that same story, such as Giovanni's and Ontario Sporting Supplies. I was ready to buy an HK94 carbine, but they said it was too short to sell to me, but they could weld a flash suppressor to the end of the barrel to make it long enough.
So this is no longer a thing? Just take both courses and I can buy whatever I want? Any other permits or anything needed to transport it from the store to home, or back and forth to a club?
I got my FAC and guns a long time ago, never bothered with a PAL, suppose I should do that.
If you have a restricted permit, can you bring your handguns back and forth across the US border? Hypothecally, what if your guns are registered in the US, you gave them here but they ere never registered here?
I got my FAC and guns a long time ago, never bothered with a PAL, suppose I should do that.
If you have a restricted permit, can you bring your handguns back and forth across the US border? Hypothecally, what if your guns are registered in the US, you gave them here but they ere never registered here?
Another source of information would be to call one of the border posts or the RCMP and ask what you need to do.
Starting from scratch it’s usually both. Round here PAL is a 1 day course, RPAL is 2 days. Dunno about the RPAL on its own but it might be possible.If you want a restricted firearm do you need to do JUST the restricted course. Or both courses together?
As I understand it the PAL is required...but can't really make out if a single course can get me both, or whether they're separate.
I've seen pricing for about $360 for the PAL on Kijiji. I was also under the impression I'll need a specific gun safe to keep firearms...but it looks like above that a normal safe will do?
Starting from scratch it’s usually both. Round here PAL is a 1 day course, RPAL is 2 days. Dunno about the RPAL on its own but it might be possible.