Expendable Nate
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- New Brunswick
WHERE CAN I FIND THEM?? I hear there legal in Canada but who carries them
some people .... why cant they just let us have fun
http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/E-17/FullText.html
6. Except as authorized under this Act and subject to such exemptions as may be provided by regulation, no person shall
(a) make or manufacture explosives either wholly or in part except in a licensed factory;
(b) sell any authorized explosive unless that person is the operator of a licensed factory or licensed magazine and is authorized to sell explosives;
(c) store any explosive in a magazine that is not a licensed magazine;
(d) have in his possession any explosive; or
(e) carry on, except in a licensed factory, any of the following processes, namely,
(i) dividing into its component parts, or otherwise breaking up or unmaking, any explosive,
(ii) making fit for use any damaged explosive, or
(iii) remaking, altering or repairing any explosive.
http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/regulations/C.R.C.,_c._599/FullText.html
“safety cartridge” means a cartridge for any shotgun, gun, rifle, pistol, revolver and industrial gun the case of which can be extracted after firing and that is so closed as to prevent any explosion in one cartridge being communicated to another cartridge but does not include tracer, incendiary, high explosive or other similar military type cartridges; (cartouche de sûreté);
http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/regulations/C.R.C.,_c._599/FullText.html
117. (1) Except as provided in this section, no person shall sell
(a) any authorized explosive of Class 7, Fireworks, unless he is the operator of a licensed factory or licensed fireworks magazine; or
(b) any other explosive unless the explosive is an authorized explosive and he is the operator of a licensed factory or licensed magazine other than a licensed temporary magazine and the purchaser is
(i) the operator of a licensed factory or licensed magazine,
(ii) the holder of a valid licence or permit issued by an authorized provincial or territorial department or agency providing for the storage of explosives, or
(iii) the holder of a valid Purchase and Possession Permit.
(2) The operator of a licensed factory, licensed fireworks magazine or licensed magazine other than a licensed temporary magazine is authorized to sell only the authorized explosives to which his licence applies.
(3) Any person may, subject to the following conditions and restrictions, have in his possession and sell the following authorized explosives:
(a) gunpowder or small arms propellant, if the total quantity stored for sale does not exceed 12 kilograms and the explosive is stored in a detached store or suitable receptacle, as defined in sections 134 and 136, in accordance with the provisions set out in sections 135 and 137;
(b) percussion caps, if the total number stored for sale does not exceed 10,000 and they are stored separately from other explosives in a suitable receptacle as defined in section 136;
(c) safety cartridges and safety fuses, if the quantity stored does not exceed that permitted by Part XI; and
(d) Subdivisions 1, 3 and 4 of Division 2 fireworks, if the quantity stored does not exceed that permitted by Part XI.
13. (1) “Ammunition” means an explosive of any class when enclosed in a case or contrivance or otherwise adapted or prepared so as to form a cartridge or charge for small arms, cannon, any other weapon, or for blasting, or so as to form any safety or other fuse for blasting or shells, or so as to form any tube for firing explosives, or so as to form a percussion cap, detonator, shell, torpedo, war rocket or other contrivance other than a firework.
131. Subject to any provincial law or regulation or any municipal by-law, a person may, if he takes reasonable precautions against accidents, keep in his possession on his premises, for private use and not for sale,
(a) a quantity of Division 2 of Class 7 fireworks, not exceeding 10 kilograms gross weight, that were sold to him in accordance with these Regulations;
(b) such quantity of safety cartridges as he may reasonably require for a rifle, revolver or shotgun that he may lawfully possess and use; and
(c) any quantity of Christmas crackers and caps for toy guns.