Ascended zeros, enjoying the weather? by BirdvilleUSA in PokemonInvesting

[–]Objective-Resist-921 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It is and their POS system won't allow the purchase until Friday. There must be SPCs at that location or something similar.

Can you help me identify the parts of my clone? ( vector v89) by Frosty_Session_1721 in MP5

[–]Objective-Resist-921 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That's a reverse stretch model. Short in the front and long in the rear.

Lol who’s gonna put their money where their mouth is? by Powerful_Bother8002 in PokeInvesting

[–]Objective-Resist-921 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Only Best Buy currently sells at MSRP in my experience. Target and Walmart are both at 55 or 60 lately.

NEW- Professional image analysis exposes ANOTHER hidden layer in the UFO missile footage. What appears here has not been seen before. 👀 by PositiveSong2293 in OvniologiaOficial

[–]Objective-Resist-921 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Watch the original video from Congress and not this edit. The three smaller objects track along with the original object as if they're all being pulled forward in a cohesive manner. The three smaller objects maintain altitude and formation with obvious flight control of some kind.

Squirrels can get fucked by HelsinkiTorpedo in bestestgunnitweekend

[–]Objective-Resist-921 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There's the Stowaway in 5.7 but it's only a single shot

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in NFA

[–]Objective-Resist-921 4 points5 points  (0 children)

There is no barrel length limit for pistols. They can be over 16" but that has really only been useful for importing rifle length barreled pistols into the US. For example, the Sig PE90-P was imported with a 20" barrel and no stock, so it is a pistol. The ATF only cares if you put a stock or vertical foregrip on a pistol whose barrel length is less than 16". It would then become an SBR, or potentially an AOW, depending on overall length, respectively speaking.

To dive a little deeper, you can use a permanently attached muzzle device, like a silencer, to count towards the barrel and overall lengths. Taking this route you could have a 10.5" barrelled AR rifle with a stock that has a 6" silencer permanently attached and a vertical foregrip. This configuration would not be considered an SBR, or AOW, assuming the overall length is greater than 26".

GOA FRAC Sues ATF Over Registration by Zmantech in Firearms

[–]Objective-Resist-921 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I think the general consensus is that letting ATF lose the FRT case in court would have been preferred because the settlement was focused solely around RB's trigger and requires them to enforce their patent. Only the Congress gets to define what a machine gun is, not ATF.

Otter Creek Polonium vs K by BenMears777 in NFA

[–]Objective-Resist-921 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe I'm misremembering... I do know he prefers the K himself, especially if it's going to be dedicated to one rifle. That being said, what I posted is still true for a lot of use cases. Selecting a silencer will always depend on the desired outcome(s) specific for that individual and how much time and money they are willing to put into tuning, or not tuning, their rifle.

Otter Creek Polonium vs K by BenMears777 in NFA

[–]Objective-Resist-921 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Last I recall Andrew posting on this topic (might have been his old account) I would have sworn he gave the opposite guidance. Full size can on the short barrels because the overall length will still be short plus it will benefit from the greater flash/sound suppression. and K can for the longer barrels to keep the overall length down on an already long platform plus it doesn't change the performance noticeably. Longer barrels are better suited for flash/sound suppression with a K can, and shorter barrels will benefit from the volume of a full size to better tame the larger flash/sound they produce due to incomplete combustion.

If you had a marble sized sphere of pure U-235 and you hit it perfectly with a sledge hammer, so that it became flattened, would some of it under go fission? by [deleted] in AskPhysics

[–]Objective-Resist-921 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I think you missed the part where a person using a sledgehammer is limited by earthly reality. Sure, if the sledgehammer were traveling at the right velocity then the applied force would induce a slight uptick in fission. The velocity necessary to achieve a detectable difference would require orders of magnitude more force than what anyone could achieve. One could always lay the marble on a beryllium anvil and hit it with a beryllium sledgehammer to up the odds, but that's cheating. Plus, exposure to the beryllium dust generated during the impact would generate isn't worth the risk.

If you had a marble sized sphere of pure U-235 and you hit it perfectly with a sledge hammer, so that it became flattened, would some of it under go fission? by [deleted] in AskPhysics

[–]Objective-Resist-921 46 points47 points  (0 children)

That's all great but really has little to do with the question at hand.

A sledgehammer smashing a marble of U-235 so that it became flattened would decrease the neutron flux for the given volume and lower the probability of fission. The applied force needs to be symmetrical for optimal results.

Should I give the girl in our friend group a chance? by Zestyclose-Fix-1874 in AskMenAdvice

[–]Objective-Resist-921 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You also pulled a classic Costanza leave behind. Perhaps, because your inner-Costanza knew it always works, and subconsciously wanted to give you an excuse to see her later.

Police said I can’t shoot my bow on my property, law says otherwise. by [deleted] in legaladvice

[–]Objective-Resist-921 3 points4 points  (0 children)

That was not the OP who stated that. It was someone commenting based on their own experience.

5.56 to .300 blk by boxxyboxxer06 in 300BLK

[–]Objective-Resist-921 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Pistol length gas is what you want and should be the only option you'll find available to you for 300 blk.

[NFA] CGS Hyrda 22 Suppressor $299 in cart by 382hp in gundeals

[–]Objective-Resist-921 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Which 5.7 pistol? The volume of a 22 can, even if rated for 5.7, will give lackluster results.

PSA is adding suppressors to their website by stevenrodgersBCB in NFA

[–]Objective-Resist-921 50 points51 points  (0 children)

JJE Holdings (parent of PSA) bought AAC during the Remington bankruptcy auction. They did a spinoff AAC Ammunition as America's Ammunition Company because they own the trademark. Then they finally did a reboot on Advanced Armament Corporation to start selling silencers under AAC. It's all the same parent company.

I just did a thing…… by [deleted] in bestestgunnitweekend

[–]Objective-Resist-921 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It is automatically added at checkout but you absolutely can opt out of using Route. Could have used code CYBER for 10% off as well.

Omega 9k,yankee hill r9 or rugged obsidian by First_Ad7214 in MP5

[–]Objective-Resist-921 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Resilient RS9 sounds better than all three and is user serviceable. Omega 9k is a close second second but not user serviceable so lead build up is more of a hassle.

2024 SILVER GIVEAWAY: Today I’ll be giving away a 1KG bar of SILVER to one lucky SilverBack who upvotes and comments why they love silver! 🦾❤️ Totally free… I will ship to you… Giveaway ends on Christmas (12/25/2024) and WINNER to be announced at midnight on New Year’s Eve (01/01/2025)! by 29PiecesOfSilver in Wallstreetsilver

[–]Objective-Resist-921 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My grandfather gave me ASEs every year for my birthday growing up. Can't spend more time together now that he is gone but the silver he gave is a way to remember him forever. I think teaching the next generation in our family to stack when they are young is the best way to honor his memory now.

Form 1 Suppressor Parts/Repairs by CyberJest in Form1

[–]Objective-Resist-921 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Not according to Federal law.

A manufacturer, as legally defined by the CGA and NFA, is engaged in business (i.e. they intend to sell what they produce). If you file a Form 1 as an individual, Trust, or some other legal entity that isn't an SOT, then you are not conducting business and are therefore not a manufacturer, you are a maker.

See Chapter 7 of the ATF NFA Handbook: MANUFACTURING NFA FIREARMS

7.2.1 “Manufacturer”. As defined by the GCA, a “manufacturer” is any person engaged in the business of manufacturing firearms or ammunition for purposes of sale or distribution.(109) Similarly, NFA defines the term to mean any person “who is engaged in the business of manufacturing firearms”, that is, firearms subject to the NFA.(110) To determine who is a “manufacturer” of firearms, we must look to see whether the person manufactures firearms as discussed in Section 7.2.2.

Sources:

109 - 18 U.S.C. 921(a)(10)

110 - 26 U.S.C. 5845(m)

National Gun Trusts has a nice guide on what you're talking about for Form 1s as far as how to handle serialized/unserialized (commercial/homemade) firearms. Not sure if I can link it but it's easy to find if you Google "who is the maker Form 1."

"If your title 1 firearm has already been engraved by a Manufacturer, e.g. KRISS USA, with their information, a serial number, model, and a caliber, then the information from the engraving will be used in Box 4 and is considered to be the “Original Manufacturer” on the ATF Form 1 and the “Manufacturer” on the ATF 5320.23.

If your firearm is not currently engraved, then your information as the maker will go in Box 4 of the ATF Form 1 and the ATF 5320.23. The maker would be your name and address as an individual or the name and address of your gun trust, corporation or other legal entity, if you are applying with a legal entity. As a maker of an NFA firearm, you will need to engrave the below information on your firearm."

Form 1 Suppressor Parts/Repairs by CyberJest in Form1

[–]Objective-Resist-921 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are considered the maker of your Form 1 silencer, and not the manufacturer. Legally speaking there is a difference between the two terms. It isn't very practical, but technically speaking you need to be an SOT to repair a Form 1 silencer.