Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi there,
There is an issue with role permissions that is being worked on at the moment.
If you are having trouble with access or permissions on regional forums please post here to get access: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/2058365403/you-do-not-have-permission-for-that#latest

atf Vs airsoft

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,588 ✭✭✭KonFusion


    LOL!*

    *I'll find a picture of a cat to better display this later....

    Maybe this'll do:

    Lolcano.gif


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 23,140 ✭✭✭✭TheDoc


    That gave me a good laugh

    "can be converted into military grade machine guns"

    LOLOLOLOLOLOL

    America fail

    StupidAmericans.jpg


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,397 ✭✭✭MerryDespot


    I'd like to think that a few atf people ended up maimed trying to prove that point!:D
    Cheers Joe for cheering up my evening.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 986 ✭✭✭joe stodge


    easily converted to fire live rounds.
    what does he consider easy?? turning coal into diamonds with his bare hands??


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,397 ✭✭✭MerryDespot


    Easily converted when given to colt and with every working part replaced, basically leaving the only airsoft parts being the stock, rails and pistol grip.
    But yeah - otherwise easily done. Can be done by any mid sized firearms manufacturer in their own factory!

    Quick - the world is ending - we have to stop this scurge now!!


  • Advertisement
  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 11,001 ✭✭✭✭Masada


    in fairness, that cop is right,

    coz if you happen to have an AR15 lying around, you could easily take out its receiver, stock and barrel and bolt it all the airsoft guns pistol grip, then that'd kill people!!! :eek:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 986 ✭✭✭joe stodge


    Masada wrote: »
    in fairness, that cop is right,

    coz if you happen to have an AR15 lying around, you could easily take out its receiver, stock and barrel and bolt it all the airsoft guns pistol grip, then that'd kill people!!! :eek:
    would it not make sence for them to seize all pistol grips then?? confused.gifbiggrin.gif


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 769 ✭✭✭AirsoftEire.com


    Total bull, they denied the request to view the documentation as it was no doubt quickly realised that the report was utter nonesense.

    As far as I know the only part thats even remotely interchangeable with a real steel M4 is the charging handle and even that has to be modified to fit in the airsoft version.

    A story made to be something it isn't.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,061 ✭✭✭damagegt


    If this for real?Surely hes a some what educated man in firearms.Can people really be this stupid.

    Needs to be ready for trouble?What kinda of trouble exactly are you suppose to prepare yourself for with and airsoft gun?running out of gas or bbs or your battery going flat mid game or maybe it was all in good faith and he just worried about all the cash were gonna spend.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 208 ✭✭Gray


    & even if it was remotely possible to do why bother the US has more real guns that people:confused:


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,397 ✭✭✭MerryDespot


    My bet is that ATF dude was going for promotion and wanted to get a smell of publicity off him.
    If anyone wants to think that this is bull**** go and watch all five seasons of the wire, then you'll come back just as jaded as I am now when it comes to law enforcement agencies and their need to create a cluster fcuk out of a nice non starter.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 986 ✭✭✭joe stodge


    My bet is that ATF dude was going for promotion and wanted to get a smell of publicity off him.
    If anyone wants to think that this is bull**** go and watch all five seasons of the wire, then you'll come back just as jaded as I am now when it comes to law enforcement agencies and their need to create a cluster fcuk out of a nice non starter.

    no way, my bet is he's just straight out stupid and ignorant.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 208 ✭✭Gray


    damagegt wrote: »
    If this for real?Surely hes a some what educated man in firearms.Can people really be this stupid.

    Are but he is an expert being in the ATF he noticed straight off that they didn't have RED TIPS so they must be some sort of firearm:eek: Just too stupid to admit they made a mistake after making a fuss over nothing typical cop:rolleyes:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,132 ✭✭✭Stonewolf


    Gray wrote: »
    & even if it was remotely possible to do why bother the US has more real guns that people:confused:

    Because they can fire full auto.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,174 ✭✭✭✭Captain Chaos


    That just depends on the State and the small matter of a Class 3 licence being authorised.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 208 ✭✭Gray


    Stonewolf wrote: »
    Because they can fire full auto.

    Easier to convert Real Steel to full auto than work a miracle on an AEG


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 121 ✭✭physter


    Mental! Fair enough if local beat cops made the seizure then tried to justify their mistake but this is the atf, if anyone is supposed to be an expert in firearms and what is dangerous and what isn't, it should be them.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,082 ✭✭✭bravestar


    Coming from his side of the fence...

    retard.jpg

    ...epic fail on his part. Methinks someone will be retiring early.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,612 ✭✭✭bullets


    Think there was a write up about this story or a similar one a few months
    back over on arnies.

    There is an element of truth to the story.
    We as airsofters are always quick to jump in and say
    no way can an airsoft gun be used to fire real steel ammo,
    the parts would not stand up, they cant be interchanged, low melting
    pot metal makes it impossible etc, all you would be left with is the stock.

    I cant find the URL but I remember reading that
    Theres is a .22LR drop in Kit you can buy that supposedly will fit
    into the outer shell / body of an Airsoft GBB M4.
    and works just fine and dandy!
    (for how long before something breaks I dont know :-) )

    It basically will let someone use the parts of the GBB as furniture or a housing for the inners of a real firearm. the airsofts gbb inner barrel & bolt system is taken out and replaced. (so the .22 is being fired through a real barrel that sits inside the outer airsoft one that being used for decoration)

    In the US as far as I know each state could have completely different gun laws, so it could possibly allow someone to buy a drop it kit, and make it
    look like a real M4 if the state they lived in did not allow them to purchase a real one.


    ~B


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,261 ✭✭✭Puding


    double post


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,261 ✭✭✭Puding


    most of this comes down to publicity and politics, know the gbb did not have there orange tips and in the us this is reason enough to seize items as the law is very clear, after that it seems to have snow balled a little, its clear the guy in the video is no firearms expert just a guy who more than likely liked the idea of being on tv, and come on we all know that the news stations in the us are not the most conservative so the story grow with the telling by the time this happened no one would admit a mistake had happened and dug in
    I cant find the URL but I remember reading that
    Theres is a .22LR drop in Kit you can buy that supposedly will fit
    into the outer shell / body of an Airsoft GBB M4.
    and works just fine and dandy!
    (for how long before something breaks I dont know :-) )

    nope not going to happen for one a real steel barrel is not going to sit inside an airsoft outerbarrel even the lightest barrel you could find would be to large let alone the inability to secure it to the receiver to any remove way as i said not going to happen :)

    there is a mod online to fit a 22 rugar into the shell of a p90 i believe which is where this may have started but this does to change the working of the firearm and is just like the movie industry where you put a black firer inside a prop shell ( aka aliens with the thompson and the pulse rifle ) but you can not swap out parts or do anything in your back yard to convert a gbb to real steel not going to happen

    when you read between the lines it comes down to politics and publicity

    from the shops site that was bringing the gbb in ( whent he story came out i keeped an eye on it )
    Airsoft: An Industry Without Standard.


    Benjamin Martin
    Airsoft Outlet website
    February 26, 2010


    I would be stating the obvious if I said that Airsoft is a competitive sport, it's part of the game to out-maneuver, out-gun, and outperform your competition. From what I can tell, this competitive spirit doesn't end at the field, it extends all the way up the distribution channel to the manufacturers and extends out horizontally to Airsoft forums and teams with their inter-community rivalries. This is what makes this industry and sport so fantastic to work and play in; it allows the natural competitive spirit that is in all of us to come out and get a breath of fresh air.

    I began working for Airsoft Outlet Northwest in April of 2006 back when the store was nothing more than a small wall of AEG's with a few spare parts. At the time Airsoft seemed to be an extremely niche market of players that more or less had been accustomed to dealing with online retailers. As the ad hoc manager I wasn't quite sure what direction to take the store, and it seemed that the obvious answer was just to let it grow with the sport as a whole. As the word of mouth spread so did our sales and soon enough Airsoft Outlet Northwest was operating two retail storefronts.

    With the absence of U.S. Airsoft manufacturers, we turned to purchasing product straight from overseas factories which allowed us to spread our margins while we dropped our prices, in turn we could offer competitive stateside retail prices to our customers. Nearly everyone that is involved in the sport has or will purchase Airsoft overseas; Hong Kong or Taiwanese prices are very lucrative when compared against U.S. retailers and distributors, the only thing to watch out for is the shipping.

    If you're just a regular player looking for that unique Western Arms M4 with COLT trademarks then you'll probably purchase that gun overseas and hope it gets through customs without hindrance, and more often than not you're going to get it through. If you're a big name U.S. distributor or a large retailer and your order of several dozen AEG's hits port, than more often than not you're going to raise some eyebrows and likely face an intensive inspection, but this is just the nature of the beast. A single customer ordering one Airsoft replica with all kinds of infringed trademarks will easily slip through Customs and Border Protection's (CBP) fragmented system while dozens of trademark free AEG's with permanent orange tips will sound more alarms than NORAD on 9/11.

    Why is this?

    Well the simplest explanation is that the odds are in favor of the consumers package not being inspected since it's usually just one box; the average CBP agent doesn't want to waste their time meddling in small orders when they could be looking for real terrorist threats.

    Airsoft Outlet Northwest has learned the hard way about all the unpredictable rules that come along with importing Airsoft replicas. When we started importing AEG's from G&P late 2006 we only knew of one obvious rule to importing, the replicas had to have blaze orange tips to indicate that they were in fact nothing more than toys. The more product we brought in the more we discovered that the rules were very malleable and arbitrary. We had one shipment from G&P come in and the inspecting CBP Agent held them because the AEG's had trademark infringed bodies, but he allowed us to come in and deface the trademarks so that we could bring in the replicas legally. The agent was kind, understanding, and a former Marine who was genuinely interested in our product. We learned from our mistakes and ensured that all future overseas orders wouldn't include trademark infringed AEG's. Our faith in the importation process and working with CBP was solid, we figured as long as we imported replicas with orange tips and that were free of illegal trademarks then we wouldn't have anything to worry about.

    To our amazement we were dead wrong.

    That CBP agent who was so willing to work with us disappeared and we began to have a different CBP agent in the Port of Portland forcefully remove orange tips and then consider the product illegal. I'm not entirely sure what caused these change of events, but I can only speculate that this replacement had some sort of negative opinion against firearms or the military because according to their predecessor we were doing everything right.

    We decided that the Port of Portland wasn't friendly to the industry so we began to take our business through the Port of Seattle, and the Port of Tacoma. We kept our noses clean and made sure that all orange flash hiders were glued on, if the flash hider was removed by a CBP agent then they would find that the barrel underneath would be painted orange as well, and every Airsoft replica was 100% clean of trademark infringements. For a short period importation ran smoothly.

    Slowly over time the ports of Seattle and Tacoma began to take interest in what we were bringing in, which was primarily WE brand Airsoft gas pistols and Airsoft plastic bb's. The pistols came completely clean of trademarks, maintained orange plugs glued into the barrel, and were nowhere near being readily convertible to fire a real round. Still, CBP agents across the board started intensively looking into everything we brought in, whether it was bb's, cheap optics, or high end Airsoft replicas.

    This continued to escalate until nearly four months ago when Airsoft Outlet Northwest brought in a batch of WE TTI Gas Blowback M4's through the Port of Tacoma. We had previously brought these Gas Blowback M4's through the Port of Seattle without incident and had been stocking them since WE TTI's first generational release of the replica back in early 2009. We figured that since Tacoma is closer to our store, and that CBP in Seattle was allowing these in, that we'd be ok.

    Again, we were dead wrong.

    Although these WE M4 replicas were free of trademarks, the WE TTI factory in Taiwan completely failed to put orange tips onto the replicas. We didn't know this until I called the inpsecting agent in Tacoma to find out why our shipment had been delayed for two months. I didn't get the inspecting agent in charge, but got his partner who was more than willing to talk and help me figure out what was going on. When the CBP agent told me they didn't have orange tips I just about hung up in realization that these replicas were gone, but he said that he went to our website and saw that we only sold to 18 and over, or under 18 with parental consent. He then divulged that because this was our business policy that he would consider them "bb guns" which wouldn't require an orange tip.

    I thought to myself that we couldn't have landed a more up front and honest CBP Agent in the country, and oddly enough he was a former military man as well.

    But he also told me that he wasn't used to Airsoft products and brought in the CPSC (Consumer Product Safety Commission) and the ATF (now BATFE). Apparently the CPSC gave them one look and then said they were O.K. to sell, but ATF wanted a closer look and whisked them away to an office in Maryland so they could "have them thoroughly examined".

    Hold this thought...

    At the same time all of this was happening, a second order of ours hit the Port of Seattle which was full of WE gas pistols, KJW M700's, and WE TTI SCAR's: all gas blowback replicas. Without hesitation the inspecting agent held this shipment indefinitely without cause or reason. When I called this CBP Agent in Seattle to inquire what the problem was he more or less gave me the cold shoulder and wouldn't (or couldn't) give me any reason as to why he was holding our product. I had stated that it was my right to know what laws Airsoft Outlet Northwest had broken and he more or less told me:

    "What rights?"

    After this conversation my faith in Customs and Border Protection completely fell apart. I realized that we (Airsoft Outlet NW) were dealing with bigoted individuals whose personal agendas were more important than holding the Airsoft industry to any sort of standard.

    I now assume that this agent in Seattle, like many oblivious officials do, based his judgments purely on hearsay and without any circumstantial evidence seized our product for his own self gratification and/or self promotion. He has yet to provide any sort of proof that he, or anyone else, has been able to convert any of the WE gas pistols, KJW M700's, or WE TTI SCAR's to shoot live ammo. I would even go as far as to call him a liar if he said he did test them because of the fact that the civilian or military version of the SCAR is still extremely limited in number, and I doubt this CBP Agent would be able to get one to potentially destroy. The simple fact of the matter is that these three Airsoft replicas are nowhere close to having the ability to shoot live ammunition. The inspecting agent is basing his judgments on speculation and not fact, he cannot provide any evidence to support his argument, and refuses to open any lines of communication about our product being illegal.

    Now, Back in Tacoma there has been a recent press release by Port Director Rolando Suliveras, Jr that essentially states the CBP Agents in the Port of Tacoma made a "good interception" because "these rifles could have had far-reaching and potentially devastating ramifications if they had gotten into the hands of individuals who wanted to do harm in the American population"

    Sure Airsoft replicas look and feel like a firearm, the realism is what makes Airsoft so much fun, but we all know that they are nothing more than toys used by hobbyists for gaming and by Law Enforcement for training. But an Airsoft replica to the ignorant individual, who is supposedly the first line of defense on what's right and wrong, may interpret Airsoft as some sort of malicious tool out to destroy society. If these Airsoft replicas have such potentially "devastating ramifications" then why are they so readily available for purchase from multiple Airsoft vendors across America? If these are so dangerous and illegal then why isn't the ATF seizing them nation wide? did the Port of Tacoma jump to conclusions on the matter and is now needing the ATF to cover their mistakes? It's evident that the realism of Airsoft is too overwhelming for these simple minds whose only goal is to make themselves look good in lieu of facing massive problems with immigration and real threats posed to the American public.

    In proper CBP fashion Suliveras has also failed to provide any sort of evidence to prove his point that these Airsoft replicas could be converted to shoot a real round. According to this article on the CBP website Suliveras and his boys found that:

    "[replacing the] internal components with original machinegun components could be accomplished within a short period of time, thus rendering the rifles capable of firing live ammunition."

    This statement that these replicas could shoot live ammo with a few internal changes alone is absolutely ludicrous! I doubt these CBP agents, let alone ATF agents, bothered to notice that these Airsoft replicas lack feed ramps to load real ammunition; so it would be physically impossible if someone wanted to use the WE TTI M4 as a whole unit to shoot live ammo. I'm not a machinist, but I can assume that it takes a little longer than "a short period of time" to mill a precise feed ramp for an aluminum barrel that doubtingly could withstand the 62,366 psi that a 5.56mm NATO round can put off. As a side note, the average velocity of a 5.56mm NATO round is 940 meters/sec, the average velocity of one of these Airsoft replicas is 137 meters/sec. To me that doesn't sound like the Airsoft M4 could handle firing any sort of real ammunition.

    Now we at Airsoft Outlet Northwest, being the rational individuals we are, went out and had a gunsmith check the true compatibility of these replicas and found the following information:

    * The WE TTI M4's lack any sort of functional gas tube which is integral to an AR15's operation

    * The upper receiver of an AR15 fits onto the lower of the WE TTI M4

    * The stock trigger pack in the WE TTI cannot strike the firing pin of a AR15 bolt

    * The body of the WE TTI lower is several mils thinner than an AR15 lower, and shims would be needed for any AR trigger pack to work

    * The trigger pack of an AR15 appears to be able to fit onto the lower receiver of a WE TTI M4, one of the AR15 trigger pack retaining pins is impossible to insert without major modification, and the hammer isn't operable with the WE TTI lower.

    So essentially these Airsoft replicas cannot even operate an AR15 trigger pack without heavy modification with a precise tooling system operated by someone who knows the specific measurements to drill and tap the WE TTI lower receiver.

    To me this doesn't sound like it's feasible within "a short period of time".

    All of these compounded issues have made it clear that Customs and Border Protection lacks any consistency, cohesiveness, or competent Agents. One can do a simple Google search for these WE TTI M4 Gas Blowback Airsoft Replicas and find that there are retailers across the country carrying them, some of them with infringed trademarks! I don't even want to state how many U.S. retailers are carrying the WE TTI SCAR since there is a massive distributor selling them out of California. As for the WE gas pistols and KJW M700's, well, those aren't even close to being illegal but according to our friendly CBP Agent in Seattle, Agent Bianchi, we don't have any rights to even find out how to import these Airsoft replicas.

    These Agents that are assigned to protect America have gone out of their way to make Airsoft Outlet Northwest look like a faceless entity with dark ulterior motives behind a guise of a friendly retail establishment. Internet rumors are now running rampant because of this, and susceptible citizens are speculating that these "machine guns" were destined to Mexico, Canada, or some sort of sleeper terrorist cell in the States. The fact of the matter is that Airsoft Outlet Northwest is a true "mom and pop" store that is owned and operated by a husband, wife, their son, and a handful of faithful employees who all believe in the American way of life. Before this incident we had sold numerous WE TTI M4 Airsoft replicas to Law Enforcement agents and Military men who use them for training; we have also sold these replicas to the local Oregon based manufacturer Crimson Trace who demonstrate their product with Airsoft.

    If anything CBP is destroying local economy with their ignorance.

    It's obvious to me there there is a massive polarity how Customs and Border Protection handles importation. The first agent I had talked to in Tacoma decided that the WE TTI M4's weren't even Airsoft, but instead were bb guns since they didn't have orange tips. CBP Agents in California allow the WE TTI SCAR to come through their ports en masse while one biased Agent in Seattle can stop a shipment based on inconclusive evidence. Talking to the distributors in California I found out that they are allowed a grace period to come in and rectify any problems with their shipments before they're seized; I wish Airsoft Outlet NW had that luxury here in Oregon and Washington.

    All of this has made me wonder if there is any sort of standard at all, or are legal judgments with Airsoft left up to the arbitrary decision of the agent that inspects a shipment? Oddly enough the only CBP agents that have been forthcoming with our supposed rights, and have let us rectify any problems, have been former military men. As for the other agents that have, for lack of a better word, stolen our product, none of them have divulged any sort of information to help us let alone open any lines of communication to come to a common ground.

    As an importer of replica guns, we should be allowed to know what is illegal to import without facing bigoted scrutiny. If we, or the factory, makes any sort of mistake that CBP doesn't like, then we should be allowed to rectify the situation and come to a mutual agreement with the inspecting Agent. Customs and Border Protection's lack of any sort of national regularity is alarming to see first hand, and their complete ineptitude of how firearms operate is absurd. We should be able to prove our case without oppression or denial.

    Customs and Border Protection seems to be on a witch hunt, and we're at the stake.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 499 ✭✭Beez


    bullets wrote: »
    Think there was a write up about this story or a similar one a few months
    back over on arnies.

    There is an element of truth to the story.
    We as airsofters are always quick to jump in and say
    no way can an airsoft gun be used to fire real steel ammo,
    the parts would not stand up, they cant be interchanged, low melting
    pot metal makes it impossible etc, all you would be left with is the stock.

    I cant find the URL but I remember reading that
    Theres is a .22LR drop in Kit you can buy that supposedly will fit
    into the outer shell / body of an Airsoft GBB M4.
    and works just fine and dandy!
    (for how long before something breaks I dont know :-) )

    It basically will let someone use the parts of the GBB as furniture or a housing for the inners of a real firearm. the airsofts gbb inner barrel & bolt system is taken out and replaced. (so the .22 is being fired through a real barrel that sits inside the outer airsoft one that being used for decoration)

    In the US as far as I know each state could have completely different gun laws, so it could possibly allow someone to buy a drop it kit, and make it
    look like a real M4 if the state they lived in did not allow them to purchase a real one.


    ~B

    Ye but airsoft guns are legal, and surely theres enough proper guns in America to worry about. And he couldnt even put the mag in the right way, and he works for the ATF! Its all a bit ridiculous really.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,612 ✭✭✭bullets


    Cant remember the URL that I read my info from, must have been incorrect so.
    I remember it being that the airsoft gun was more or less a wrapper around the kit.

    Great read Puding nice to see the full story from the Airsoft dealers perspective.

    Going a bit off topic but the very first time I ever fired a rifle it
    was from a rifle that had a .22 barrel placed inside a 7.62 barrel
    (L12A1 conversion kit) a tight squeeze but have seen a barrel within a barrel.

    (I will stop posting now as dont want to veer things any further towards RS banter )
    ~B


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,261 ✭✭✭Puding


    Yep seen and used firearms that have been converted to differant calibers, it's rather common but that is completely differant to converting airsoft to a firearm. As you say there are rap around kits for firearms to change there look have a look around us shops and there are a number of comercial versions avaliable and I,ve seen airsoft devices used as shells for firearms as like the film industry but you still have the same firearm underneath

    change of firarm caliber - can happen
    adding a cosmetic shell to firearm - can happen
    converting airsoft device to firearm - not going to happen

    a lot of confusion comes from where people add cosmetic shells, but this is just that cosmetic you still have the same firearm underneath, problem is this the gets changed to 'airsoft converted to firearm'


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,213 ✭✭✭peter-pantslez


    airsoft can be converted to military grade guns hahahaha i nearly fell off the chair when i heard that!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,132 ✭✭✭Stonewolf


    Beez wrote: »
    Ye but airsoft guns are legal, and surely theres enough proper guns in America to worry about. And he couldnt even put the mag in the right way, and he works for the ATF! Its all a bit ridiculous really.

    Maybe he works with Alcohol or Tobacco.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,397 ✭✭✭MerryDespot


    Maybe he was under the influence of both alcohol and tobacco when he tried to 'examine' them ... would explain his epic stupidity.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 208 ✭✭Gray


    News just in US Customs acting in conjunction with the ATF has seized a shipment of Tipperary Spring Water. The ATF has issued the following statement

    "It is highly irresponsible to allow this substance to hit the streets as anyone with a basic knowledge of miracles can easily convert this to wine"


Advertisement