Met a Calgunner at Oak Tree this morning at 0800 to do a PPT. The staff was pleasant and efficient, we were done in 30 minutes and I was on my way. Later in the morning I met another Calgunner at Gun Gallery in Glendale at 1100. Another 30 minute transaction although the owner was extremely nervous about the safe exemption and said that he has been worked over by the DOJ on lock issues and that the DOJ was being very tough on locks with shops. He was passionate and worried about it and it didn't seem to be a ploy to sell a cheap lock so I agreed to take the lock to set his mind at ease. He thanked me profusely and cut a good deal for the lock, what the heck, the lock cost was worth a 30 minute PPT. Also a pretty and pleasant young lady did the paperwork. Her smile was worth the cost of the lock!
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Two good PPT experiences today
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I love it when a plan comes together!!!!
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PIMP stands for Positive Intellectual Motivated Person
When pimping begins, friendship ends.
Don't let your history be a mysteryComment
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For some shops. 1 hour is fast.
Evans Gunsmithing took 2 hours for a single rifle PPT.
Grants in Costa Mesa takes about 15 minutes if they aren't slammed and the DOJ computers are working.
Rifle gear is 15 - 20 minutes once they pick your number.
Martin Retting took me 1 hour.
The time frame is all over the place.
-TComment
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Lol 5 min ppt is slow. Golden state tactical can have me in and out, I usually meet up during my lunch hour so time is of the essence. Finger the weapon, ask a few questions, pay, sign paperwork and go get some food! 30 min is an eternity to initial and sign a piece of paper.Comment
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Haven't done too many PPTs but to have two in 30 or less in one day...Id be buying a lotto ticket.Originally posted by ar15barrelsSo you are throwing out 95% of reality to select the 5% of reality where you are actually right?
We must be on calguns...Comment
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A PPT takes maybe 10 minutes where I go.Oppressors can tyrannize only when they achieve a standing army, an enslaved press, and a disarmed populace. -- James Madison
The Constitution shall never be construed to authorize Congress to prevent the people of the United States, who are peaceable citizens, from keeping their own arms. -- Samuel Adams, Debates and Proceedings in the Convention of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 86-87 (Pearce and Hale, eds., Boston, 1850)Comment
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