. . . except this method has been proven to produce diametrically opposing "advisements" regularly.Justin said:Or, for a final answer, one could consult the people who run the regulatory agency in charge of enforcing those laws and take their advisement to heart.
for a final answer, one could consult the people who run the regulatory agency in charge of enforcing those laws and take their advisement to heart.
There are some great threads on the Draco over on Gabe "Billy Mays" Suarez' Warrior Talk forum.
I'll probably regret asking, but what was this bunny trail all about?There's plenty of "great threads on the Draco" right here on THR, thank you very much, where you'e not brainwashed into spending at least 5x the price for something just to validate one's existence.
Rather than answer that directly, I'll just repeat the old line:I can easily see a Draco as a practical housegun
Dracos are an inexpensive way to be half-way to something useful.
Add a tax stamp and folding stock -- now you're talking!
Dracos are just this side of useless
IF when you grab your shot timer and targets and hit the range -- and you run realistic defensive scenarios against the clock -- any version of a stock-less pseudo-rifle or PGO shotgun is the gun that lets you put the most, most accurate shots on target, fastest, then make that gun your defensive weapon of choice
Absolutely, you want one engraved ROMARM/CUGIR ROMANIA, not a gun to buy on-line shopping by price. I too looked as several before buying, and I paid a bit more for the one I brought home than I could have for several of the ones I didn't.Ive handled a number of the Draco pistols. I would say check it out before you buy it.
I don't care for the draco as it is just a couple of inches away from folding AK, but I would like to get a mini draco