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You have to wonder why they can't be done on line. Signature I guess, but you can do electronic signatures. Or, you could fill them out on line, print them, then sign them and mail them in. This hand written crap is for the birds.
Gary
You have to wonder why they can't be done on line. Signature I guess, but you can do electronic signatures. Or, you could fill them out on line, print them, then sign them and mail them in. This hand written crap is for the birds.
Gary
Because the object of the exercise is to provide duplicates to both the buyer and seller, something the old blue card utterly failed to do. It also requires the SIGNATURES of both the buyer and seller, which your on-line scenario fails to provide.
Unless you are in the habit of bringing a PC and printer with you (and your range has WiFi), the FA-10 is far more convenient.
You don't actually have to complete the FA-10 on line and submit it electronically, although that would be nice too. Being able to fill it out then print it for signatures and mailing would be a nice option. Gary
OK, Techno-Mage, do this: SCAN the FA-10 in, then use the autofill function on your magic pdf software (ScanSoft, whatever) to type in the blanks and "X" the boxes. Print 3, sign 3 and mail.
Because it might make it easier to buy and register a gun, and we know THAT would be totally unacceptable.You have to wonder why they can't be done on line...
You don't actually have to complete the FA-10 on line and submit it electronically, although that would be nice too. Being able to fill it out then print it for signatures and mailing would be a nice option.
Gary
I don't think that would work. The light blue parts wouldn't scan, which is why they use light blue ink on the parts they don't want to scan in. Not having those little blue boxes might throw off the spacing and screw up the OCR software. An on line form designed from the ground up as such wouldn't have that problem.
Gary