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Talk:Armsel Striker and variants: Difference between revisions
(New page: Patent rights to produce and sell the Striker in the United States was purchased from Armsel by Grant W. Stapleton of Sentinel Arms Corporation in the early eighties; who then upgraded the...) |
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Patent rights to produce and sell the Striker in the United States was purchased from Armsel by Grant W. Stapleton of Sentinel Arms Corporation in the early eighties; who then upgraded the shotgun to commercial U.S. standards. The Streetsweeper was a cheap knock-off copy of the earlier South African Stryker, which experienced mechanical and catastrophic failures when fired with U.S. shotgun loads. | Patent rights to produce and sell the Striker in the United States was purchased from Armsel by Grant W. Stapleton of Sentinel Arms Corporation in the early eighties; who then upgraded the shotgun to commercial U.S. standards. The Streetsweeper was a cheap knock-off copy of the earlier South African Stryker, which experienced mechanical and catastrophic failures when fired with U.S. shotgun loads. | ||
==Now able to buy ... that's funny== | |||
I thought the original BAN on rotary shotguns was based on the design, not by name. However, the original BAN by Bill Clinton was by name, so I suppose that Sentinel Arm's newest offerings are legal to buy and sell. Don't quote me on that, but I know the original guns were declared Destructive Devices by good old Bill. :( [[User:MoviePropMaster2008|MoviePropMaster2008]] 20:18, 16 June 2009 (UTC) |
Revision as of 20:18, 16 June 2009
Patent rights to produce and sell the Striker in the United States was purchased from Armsel by Grant W. Stapleton of Sentinel Arms Corporation in the early eighties; who then upgraded the shotgun to commercial U.S. standards. The Streetsweeper was a cheap knock-off copy of the earlier South African Stryker, which experienced mechanical and catastrophic failures when fired with U.S. shotgun loads.
Now able to buy ... that's funny
I thought the original BAN on rotary shotguns was based on the design, not by name. However, the original BAN by Bill Clinton was by name, so I suppose that Sentinel Arm's newest offerings are legal to buy and sell. Don't quote me on that, but I know the original guns were declared Destructive Devices by good old Bill. :( MoviePropMaster2008 20:18, 16 June 2009 (UTC)