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70 Cal.
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Patocazador said:State laws may vary but federal law only deals with modern guns. A butt stock on a black powder pistol may be a short barreled rifle but it is not against federal law. The same setup on a centerfire Ruger Blackhawk IS a short-barred rifle and a violation if you don't have a Class II dealers license or paid the appropriate taxes after being photographed and fingerprinted.
Maybe under YOUR state law, not under federal law or the law of Pennsylvania. I have had short barreled rifles and shotguns with long gun butt stocks. as long as it is a muzzle loader, it is ok under federal law and PA state law.I have a Springfield carbine with is a 58 caliber pistol with a detachable rifle butt stock. Every state has it's own peculiar lawsMaybe I was not clear. It would have read better if I said this,
Sawing off a percussion shotgun's barrels to 12 inches and leaving the butt stock is the same as sawing off a new shotgun's barrel and leaving the butt stock intact.
Howda pistols are pistols, they do not have butt stocks. Put Howda barrels in a full buttstock stock then you very well could have an illegal gun.
All I'm saying is read the laws on short barreled guns and rifles.
Laws are funny here's is an example of a traffic law from Alabama.
Functioning windshield wipers are required for a vehicle. The law says nothing about the actual windshield. So technically you can drive a car without an actual windshield and be legal as long as you have functioning wipers.
So a person drives around in a car without a windshield and gets ticketed. He has working wipers so he takes it to court. The judge interprets the law this way.
Do you see what I mean. The pre 1898 exemption and then other laws that vary from state to state can add a lot of confusion. How a person reads and understands a law may not be the same as how it was intended and how it will be interpreted by a judge.
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