And once you pay to have the suppressor fitted by a gunsmith what are the steps to buying/owning a actual suppressor? Just pay the $200 "fee" to the ATF?
#36
For information on how to thread your gun cross reference how to suppress a Makarov. There are custom threaded adaptors that a gunsmith can do to your Walther and it doesn't involve getting a new barrel. You thread the OUTSIDE of 1/2" of your barrel to an adaptor which then has threads on the INSIDE of it that extend past the end of the slide. If the adaptor was sitting on a table it would look like a 3/8" round cylinder threaded halfway up the outside and then the threads continue the other halfway on the inside. Does this make sense? It won't involve any welding and a good NFA machinist can make this in an afternoon.
EDIT: I noticed a major confusing typo and then fixed it. The above info is now correct.
obin![]()
Last edited by Obin Robinson; 10-02-2012 at 04:22 PM.
"We're society's crowbar. They hate us, they never want to acknowledge the dirty jobs they give us to do, but when the job is done they never throw us away - they just slip us back in the toolbox until they need us the next time. And there will always be a next time."-Jim Hooper. Beneath the Visiting Moon: Images of Combat in Southern Africa
#37
And once you pay to have the suppressor fitted by a gunsmith what are the steps to buying/owning a actual suppressor? Just pay the $200 "fee" to the ATF?
Now
Ford Flex AWD, Vulcan Nomad 1600
Prior Ownership:
VW Mk4 R32, Chevy Z71 Colorado 4x4, Audi A6 2.7T (RS6 replica wannabe), Audi 90Q, BMW X5 4.4i, VW 20AE GTI #0651, Aprilia RSV Mille, Suzuki V-Strom DL1000
#38
1) Local Law Enforcement Signature
2) Fingerprints (usually LiveScan)
3) Form 4 (5320.4 to be specific - http://www.atf.gov/forms/download/atf-f-5320-4.pdf)
4) Certificate of Compliance (U.S. citizenship attestation, basically - http://www.atf.gov/forms/download/atf-f-5330-20.pdf)
5) Check to BATFE for $200 - (Usually written to Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
6) Send in the mail to Georgia (Form 1s and Form 4s go to different addresses, the Form you fill out tells you where to send it) and wait 6 months hoping for approval if everything is filled in properly. If not, they will call or mail you and let you know your mistake and usually let you correct it.
Alternatively you can go the trust route and avoid the LEO signoff and fingerprints (supposedly the certificate of compliance as well, but I heard some processors have begun asking for this one too).
The gunsmith is only threading your barrel, that in itself is not NFA related and can be done at any time without any paperwork (besides the contract between you and your gunsmith). What is NFA related is the silencer itself which requires all the paperwork and the tax stamp.
When you get your item, make a copy of the stamp paperwork and keep it with your item. Put the original copy in some place secure.
If you like, I can post the link to the template trust I utilized. It has been used successfully in Maryland and i've compiled some information from other places as well to make what I think is a fairly complete trust in my state.
#39
FWIW one of the guys on Beretta Forum made this video. It explains the above post but with a bit more visual info:
obin![]()
"We're society's crowbar. They hate us, they never want to acknowledge the dirty jobs they give us to do, but when the job is done they never throw us away - they just slip us back in the toolbox until they need us the next time. And there will always be a next time."-Jim Hooper. Beneath the Visiting Moon: Images of Combat in Southern Africa
#41
I did a little bit of digging into my suppressor library. The wire mesh used in the CIA and clandestine suppressors literally looks like a wire version of burlap. Don Walsh used a material like this in his very effective LARAND suppressors. Check this page for more info on how well they worked:
http://www.bevfitchett.com/modern-fi...lencers/m.html
obin![]()
"We're society's crowbar. They hate us, they never want to acknowledge the dirty jobs they give us to do, but when the job is done they never throw us away - they just slip us back in the toolbox until they need us the next time. And there will always be a next time."-Jim Hooper. Beneath the Visiting Moon: Images of Combat in Southern Africa
#42
This book is one of my favorite suppressor books. It looks like someone put it online:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/63433263/9...d-of-Silencers
Lots of great info in the book!
obin![]()
"We're society's crowbar. They hate us, they never want to acknowledge the dirty jobs they give us to do, but when the job is done they never throw us away - they just slip us back in the toolbox until they need us the next time. And there will always be a next time."-Jim Hooper. Beneath the Visiting Moon: Images of Combat in Southern Africa
#44
Now
Ford Flex AWD, Vulcan Nomad 1600
Prior Ownership:
VW Mk4 R32, Chevy Z71 Colorado 4x4, Audi A6 2.7T (RS6 replica wannabe), Audi 90Q, BMW X5 4.4i, VW 20AE GTI #0651, Aprilia RSV Mille, Suzuki V-Strom DL1000
#45
Agreed. The reason I amassed such a huge library of suppressor books is to see what the older designs were like. Apparently they worked a lot better than people give them credit for. The modern suppressor market wants something small, lightweight, and somewhat quiet. This butts heads with the laws of physics. Look at the old-school .22 LR suppressors. They were almost a foot long but they were also quieter than modern designs. The big old submachine gun suppressors worked very well but they weren't as compact as modern ones. Did you see the suppressor made using cardboard or is it not in those links? Take a look at the Maxim ones as well. That is hundred year old technology but it still works better than some modern designs.
The other reason why suppressor designs changed to the modern small ones is that the older designs were disposable or they were built when the laws were more lenient. You could change the baffles out and you could replace the screen or Chore Boy without buying another tax stamp. The ATF changed that loophole a while ago. It killed a lot of innovation in the field. One other thing I love about those old books are seeing the hitmen improvised designs. In one of the books I have it mentions that the FBI and State Police used to come across Mob hitmen with suppressors that were made by Mob machinists. Apparently these hitmen had suppressors that were quieter and more compact than ones the US military had. Even in places like Canada and Australia there were suppressors being built (illegally) that surpassed ones the military had. Never underestimate the power of homebrewed innovation.
obin![]()
"We're society's crowbar. They hate us, they never want to acknowledge the dirty jobs they give us to do, but when the job is done they never throw us away - they just slip us back in the toolbox until they need us the next time. And there will always be a next time."-Jim Hooper. Beneath the Visiting Moon: Images of Combat in Southern Africa
#46
#47
So, do you actually pay for the suupressor before you file the paperwork?
#48
"We're society's crowbar. They hate us, they never want to acknowledge the dirty jobs they give us to do, but when the job is done they never throw us away - they just slip us back in the toolbox until they need us the next time. And there will always be a next time."-Jim Hooper. Beneath the Visiting Moon: Images of Combat in Southern Africa
#49
#50
"Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys." -P.J. O'Rourke
#51
"We're society's crowbar. They hate us, they never want to acknowledge the dirty jobs they give us to do, but when the job is done they never throw us away - they just slip us back in the toolbox until they need us the next time. And there will always be a next time."-Jim Hooper. Beneath the Visiting Moon: Images of Combat in Southern Africa