...I have a bit of a legal question that both me and my friend in IN are wondering about. I'm in southern NY, btw. Well, I'm a member of several vintage military rifle forums and have not been able to find out the answer on those boards. My friend is wanting to get into Civil War reenacting, and saw a shotgun with provenance tracing it back to John Singleton Moseby (or at least someone who fought with him). Needless to say, the barrels were cut to something like 14" long. The gun was a 10 Gauge, and my friend wants a 10 Gauge Pedersoli professionally shortened...BUT ONLY IF IT'S LEGAL! I'm also willing to do the same thing.
Is it legal to have the barrels of a legally antique shotgun shortened beyond the length that the NFA allows?
I looked for myself, read the text of the NFA, and found that any muzzleloading shotgun or rifle made into an SBR, SBS, or pistol would not legally be considered such. However, on a Federal level, is it all right? From what I've read and searched, yes. But I'm no legal expert, and want to be extra careful. I will not procede, nor will my friend, until we have first Federal and then state confirmation that it is legal. If it's not, we'll get our jollies from something else.
I managed to find this on the internet...
"CVA use to make a 70cal 'blunderbuss'...was fake, the bore wasn't flared at the end, just had a connon outside shape....Dixie use to sell a 'real' one (70cal. again, but at least the muzzle flared).
About the same time there was a 12" SXS 12ga. percusion shot gun offered.
ALL of them are gone.
In the Blackpowder Handbook-4th (current) edition, noticed an insertion by the editor (p.293). In it he claims that the BATF requires an 18" barrel even on repro shotguns. IF true, that doesn't explain all the short barreled flintlock/percusion smooth bore pistols still being sold...but if it's not true, then why did all the shoulder arms with barrels less than that length all dissapear at the same time?"
Some gunsmiths still make short-barreled shotguns or blunderbusses, and aren't penalized for it. Can anyone help me out here, or should I just write the ATF?
Is it legal to have the barrels of a legally antique shotgun shortened beyond the length that the NFA allows?
I looked for myself, read the text of the NFA, and found that any muzzleloading shotgun or rifle made into an SBR, SBS, or pistol would not legally be considered such. However, on a Federal level, is it all right? From what I've read and searched, yes. But I'm no legal expert, and want to be extra careful. I will not procede, nor will my friend, until we have first Federal and then state confirmation that it is legal. If it's not, we'll get our jollies from something else.
I managed to find this on the internet...
"CVA use to make a 70cal 'blunderbuss'...was fake, the bore wasn't flared at the end, just had a connon outside shape....Dixie use to sell a 'real' one (70cal. again, but at least the muzzle flared).
About the same time there was a 12" SXS 12ga. percusion shot gun offered.
ALL of them are gone.
In the Blackpowder Handbook-4th (current) edition, noticed an insertion by the editor (p.293). In it he claims that the BATF requires an 18" barrel even on repro shotguns. IF true, that doesn't explain all the short barreled flintlock/percusion smooth bore pistols still being sold...but if it's not true, then why did all the shoulder arms with barrels less than that length all dissapear at the same time?"
Some gunsmiths still make short-barreled shotguns or blunderbusses, and aren't penalized for it. Can anyone help me out here, or should I just write the ATF?