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originally posted by: TrueBrit
a reply to: D8Tee
So, for example, most of the higher quality air-soft guns that people use, would probably require paperwork under that jurisdiction then?
I have no experience of this, but apparently the sniper variant and DMR variant air-soft guns are often 500fps. They are of a power which means they cannot be used on targets less than 75 feet away, probably for safety reasons.
These are air guns with both a high muzzle velocity (greater than 152.4 metres or 500 feet per second) and a high muzzle energy (greater than 5.7 joules or 4.2 foot-pounds). The "muzzle velocity" is the speed of a projectile at the instant it leaves the muzzle of a gun, normally expressed in metres per second or feet per second. The "muzzle energy" is the energy of a projectile at the instant it leaves the muzzle of a gun, expressed in joules or foot-pounds. Air guns need to meet both standards to be classified as firearms for purposes of the Firearms Act.
Canada
where this "jurisdiction"
I disagree, and so does the NRA.
High velocity does not automatically mean "high powered" unless you work in the MSM. No person with any knowledge of firearms has ever called the 5.56/.223 a "high powered" round.
Yes. Very capable of killing a person.
And pellet guns are "high powered"? Really?