UPDATE (Again):...do most people hang onto receipts for the life of their firearm?
I certainly do not. I figure once it's a year (or two) in my possession and with a thousand (or 2000) through it, it's all mine.
UPDATE (Again): I heard back from Gravel and now that I have it unloaded they are asking me to send it to the warranty centre to be looked at (and hopefully repaired) by their gunsmith. I have been asked to provide the a copy of my sales receipt so on these next days off I'll be searching for a 15+ year old receipt. Which leads me to the question, do most people hang onto receipts for the life of their firearm?
If you want to try holding the slide in a vise, take the vise and pistol to the range.
You don't want to be like the President of the NFA who put a bullet through the wall into his neighbor's apartment.
The round had no marks on the primer. I did not try the plunk test and dropped the ejected round into the dud container at the range
Minor Update:
I received yesterday a "Return Authorization" number from Gravel. Tomorrow I'll make my way to the post office to mail off the pistol for warranty service. How much shipping insurance is recommended for something literally irreplaceable?![]()
Well literally zero because if they lose it, you aren't getting another one. As it is impossible to buy or sell a handgun, it has no replacement value.
Well literally zero because if they lose it, you aren't getting another one. As it is impossible to buy or sell a handgun, it has no replacement value.
Would vaseline make things better or just make them feel better?
Doesn't mean they shouldn't get money back if they did, it not the OP fault if they lost it. If I had a classic car and it gets totaled at no fault of mine and its not replaceable. I should be like oh well and suck the loss, and not expect any money?
You really live up to your dumb usernane.