![Charter arms warranty](https://kumkoniak.com/80.jpg)
A few years back a new 1911 had its extractor blowout after like 2 range trips, same thing, they wanted it back, I said no, send the darn replacement and with google's help I got the new one in myself.Īll you are doing when you ship a gun is making an anti-gunner happy. The manufacturer wanted the gun back, and I said no, send me a freaking set of screws for 25cent stamp. My most recent purchase had some screws that held it together sheared off on delivery. I will go way out of my way to get it fixed without a shipping. It'll cost between $24 and $40 or so and you know you are leaving it with people who've done this before. So just take it to your favorite local gun store and let them ship it. You can't use the "UPS Store" in the strip mall, for instance.īut most FFL's get a special deal from carriers and they can use USPS, which apparently is less expensive still. Further, they usually insist that you go to their "central" shipping office. Shipping firearms through a private carrier could cost $80 or more.
![charter arms warranty charter arms warranty](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/3c/81/7b/3c817bfd054db09b848bff1f6a73e984--bulldogs-handgun.jpg)
Federal law states that you MUST declare to the private carrier if the contents are a firearm. The common wisdom used to be to lie to the carrier about the contents of the package.
![charter arms warranty charter arms warranty](https://www.wholesalehunter.com/nimages/WH_11061605_HDPic.jpg)
Most private carriers have a special (read "much more expensive") rate for firearms than for regular packages.
![charter arms warranty charter arms warranty](https://gunstuff.tv/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/28462.png)
Basically, you can not legally ship a firearm through USPS without being a FFL.
![Charter arms warranty](https://kumkoniak.com/80.jpg)