I heard on the jungle drums over the weekend that the London Proof House recently refused to handle a batch of SP L1's.
Is this just " a bloke in the pub said" rumour or an ominous sign of things to come fact?
If true, anyone know the reason?

Moderator: dromia
HVhuntervixen wrote:Afternoon all,
I heard on the jungle drums over the weekend that the London Proof House recently refused to handle a batch of SP L1's.
Is this just " a bloke in the pub said" rumour or an ominous sign of things to come fact?
If true, anyone know the reason?
lots of talk about it on various forums, but the bottom line is it is legal, Gavin at Anglo Custom Rifles released about 40 of them IIRC after running the design and manufacturing process's past ACPO and others for approval.SevenSixTwo wrote:Nobody has yet explained to me how an L1A1 conversion is legally possible. Genuinely interested in what the difference is.
I am told it works like this:SevenSixTwo wrote:Nobody has yet explained to me how an L1A1 conversion is legally possible. Genuinely interested in what the difference is.
if I remember the conversation correctly, Gavin also had the receivers made so that they were not compatible with the original parts, I have fired one of his and it worked very well, so it was a successful project.Gaz wrote:I am told it works like this:SevenSixTwo wrote:Nobody has yet explained to me how an L1A1 conversion is legally possible. Genuinely interested in what the difference is.
A complete firearm can be either section 1 or section 5.
Pressure-bearing component parts of firearms are controlled under Section 1 only.
Therefore, if you take a section 5 firearm and dismantle it, you then have:
a) Destroyed (legally) that section 5 firearm - it no longer exists as a single licensable unit.
b) Created a pile of section 1 components.
If you then assemble a firearm from those parts, which is built so as not to fall into section 5, you then have a section 1 firearm and some leftover bits.
Apparently the Home Office gets a bit anal about closing off gas ports and details of trigger sear operation, but that's the basics. Rather nifty lateral thinking there!
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests