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Talk:Armsel Striker and variants: Difference between revisions

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(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)