Share to: share facebook share twitter share wa share telegram print page

Gun shop

High Bridge Arms, pictured in January 2012, was a notable gun shop that was located in San Francisco, California.[1]

A gun shop (also known by various other names such as firearm store and gun store) is a business that sells firearms, such as handguns and long guns, to individuals in an open shopping format. It may also provide repairs for firearms and their parts. Other items such as ammunition, hunting accessories, food, clothing, and even souvenirs may be sold in the store as well.[1]

Often having designs reminiscent of other establishments such as department stores and grocery stores, gun shops operate under widely different gun control laws depending on the specific nation, locality, and jurisdiction involved. Some locations may only employ a single gunsmith in a small space, while others might have many individuals working in a large space.

Services and trends

Europe

A gun shop in Mons, Belgium. In most of Europe, firearm possession is only permitted for sport and hunting purposes and not for personal defense.

Gun laws in Europe vary dramatically from nation to nation, with some areas having what amounts to a near total ban on civilian access to firearms while others have systems of moderate regulation. Nearly all nations contain stricter laws than that of the United States, particularly in terms of measures to require firearms training, mandate background checks, and impose confiscation of weapons upon the committing of felony crimes.

Gun legislation in Germany provides as a contrast. Individuals who desire to acquire a firearm have to meet stringent standards to receive an ownership license (German: Waffenbesitzkarte or WBK). Personal characteristics such as mental fitness and ability to physically handle the weapons well are evaluated. Germans under the age of 21, unable to prove their citizenship status, possessing a documented history of mental illness, or otherwise failing to meet the guidelines will not receive the license.[2][3]

Mexico

Retail gun shops are not legal in Mexico. The Directorate of Commercialization of Arms and Munitions (Dirección de Comercialización de Armamento y Municiones - DCAM) is the only outlet authorized to sell firearms and ammunition in the country. The business is located in Mexico City near the headquarters of the Secretariat of National Defense. No other legitimate sales may take place in the country.[4]

Examples of specific companies with items sold in Mexico City include Beretta and Colt; rifles used in hunting are particularly available. The privately owned firearms are registered with the Mexican military and may be transported outside of the home only with a specific permit, which must be renewed annually. Prospective customers go through a system of strict regulations. Factors such as the amount of ammunition that an individual can buy each month are controlled.[4]

United States

A rack of AR-15 style rifles in a gun shop in Salt Lake City, Utah

As of early 2019, there were approximately sixty-three thousand licensed gun dealers in the U.S.[5]

Akin to other general-interest shopping stores, sales at firearm shops tend to increase during the holiday season, with the month of December providing stores with the best margins. In the United States, prices for many firearms decreased in the aftermath of the Great Recession, even as general sales remained relatively high.[6]

Although it is commonly thought that most gun purchases take place in the context of a firearm-specific independent business, data from the U.S. shows that many purchases actually take place in large chain stores. Walmart in particular is the best-selling small arms retailer in the U.S.[1]

Firearm distributors need to comply with rigorous checks from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives on a local, state, and federal level. [7] In the United States, gun shops are required to have a Federal Firearms License.[8] These licenses exist in order to administer federally mandated regulations such as bans on straw purchasing.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Harnett, Sam (October 27, 2015). "San Francisco's Last Gun Shop Calls It Quits". NPR. Retrieved December 29, 2015.
  2. ^ "HELP.gv.at: Waffenbesitzkarte". www.help.gv.at.
  3. ^ Österreich, Republik. "HELP.gv.at: Waffenbesitzkarte – Antrag". HELP.gv.at.
  4. ^ a b Hawley, Chris (April 1, 2009). "Mexico: Gun controls undermined by U.S." USA Today. Retrieved October 5, 2016.
  5. ^ Freskos, Brian (7 February 2019). "The Life Cycle of a Stolen Gun" – via www.newyorker.com.
  6. ^ Armbruster, Will (29 December 2015). "Could 2015 be the year firearm sales set records?". WRIC.
  7. ^ "Firearms Compliance Inspections | Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives". ATF.gov. 12 December 2020.
  8. ^ "Federal Firearms Licenses". Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Retrieved 11 August 2023.

External links

Read other information related to :Gun shop/

Gun (disambiguation) Gun Gün Gun (staff) Dart gun Gun violence Agar gun Submachine gun Gun cultures Gun violence and gun control in Texas Gun culture in the United States Gallery gun Maxim gun The Naked Gun Combination gun Gun control Light gun Lewis gun Disappearing gun Bren light machine gun Armstrong gun Gun fu Everytown for Gun Safety Gun Interactive Light-gun shooter Water gun Gal Gun Gatling gun Degtyaryov machine gun Vickers machine gun Gun shows in the United States Gun ownership Gun safe Vickers .50 machine gun Gun violence in the United States BB gun 100-ton gun Suzuki-gun Medium ma…

chine gun Railway gun Owen gun Gun (cellular automaton) Infantry support gun Heavy machine gun Gun politics in the United States PK machine gun Top Gun Gun laws of Australia Dahlgren gun Defensive gun use Gun Quarter Noonday Gun Airsoft gun Smart gun 3-inch gun M1918 Gun law in Jamaica Gun truck Long gun Gun camera 3-inch/50-caliber gun Spring-gun Gun-type fission weapon Machine gun 75 mm gun M1916 M3 submachine gun Under the Gun Gun shield Light-gas gun RML 7-inch gun List of Top Gun video games Volley gun Finger gun Top Gun: Maverick 5-inch/38-caliber gun No Gun Ri massacre Gun shop Space gun 37 mm gun M3 Type 77 heavy machine gun Nordenfelt gun 37 mm gun M1 Gun Court 21-gun salute 105 mm gun T8 9 O'Clock Gun Foldable machine gun M60 machine gun Spud gun Thompson submachine gun Gun buyback program Gun laying Assault gun Space Gun Schwarzlose machine gun Gun control in Brazil Gun law in the United States 10-inch gun M1895 Gast gun Chekhov's gun Toy gun Grease gun Gun Shy Stun gun Browning machine gun Coalition to Stop Gun Violence 6-inch gun M1897 120 mm Gun M1 BL 60-pounder gun M1941 Johnson machine gun Machine Gun Kelly Air gun Riot gun Fuyuki-Gun 76 mm tank gun M1940 F-34 Katha

Kembali kehalaman sebelumnya