• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

Legal question on Barrel markings.

joshb

Gold $$ Contributor
I picked up a barreled action at my local gun shop. The barrel was not marked as to cartridge or caliber. The owner/ gunsmith said that was “illegal”. He didn’t give me any real grief about it but it stuck in my mind. This will be the first gun I own that isn’t marked.......yet.
My curious mind yearns for an answer on the “legality” issue. I know it’s not smart!
Josh
 
I picked up a barreled action at my local gun shop. The barrel was not marked as to cartridge or caliber. The owner/ gunsmith said that was “illegal”. He didn’t give me any real grief about it but it stuck in my mind. This will be the first gun I own that isn’t marked.......yet.
My curious mind yearns for an answer on the “legality” issue. I know it’s not smart!
Josh
Not sure of the 'legality of it. As mentioned, if it started life as a blank the manufacturer wouldn't know what the chambering would be anyway. Ethics, yes. Illegal, I doubt it. Serial number on an action would be a different matter.
Besides, I saw a Winchester M70 a friend picked up that was stamped
.222 Remington. Wouldn't fire so he had me look at it. Turned out it was actually a .223 Remington. No idea if it came from the factory that way or had the barrel set back and rechambered without re-stamping. More dangerous than NO barrel markings.
 
I would like to point out Title 27, CFR Chapter II; Part 478-Commerce in Firearms and Ammunition.

Go to Subpart F-Conduct of Business. Under 478.92, talks about the marking and serialization, paragraph ii at the end "Additional Information includes: (B) The caliber or gauge"

This is found in the book ATF gives you when you get your license "Federal Firearms Regulations Reference Guide"

Since the barrel can be changed, it makes sense to me that the barrel is the part that needs to be marked.
 
Barrels need to be marked with caliber.
All prefits are stamped on the breech end.

478.92 specifically references "licensed manufacturers and licensed importers".
So, this is a bit of a gray area for a smith that has an 01, in my opinion.

In addition to the SN engraved on the receiver, "additional information" on the "frame, receiver or barrel" must contain: model, caliber/gauge, name/city/state of operation.

For those of us with 07's, it's black and white.

May or may not be "illegal" if no caliber engraved by an 01 smith, but it's certainly a common sense safety requirement. Without an engraving, a chamber cast is required to know the chambering.
 
Last edited:
Back in the 50's or 60's, whenever Savage first made the .22/.410 over/under, my barrel had no markings at all. The action itself does not even have a serial number. The brochure that came with it told what caliber/gauge it was.
 
Back in the 50's or 60's, whenever Savage first made the .22/.410 over/under, my barrel had no markings at all. The action itself does not even have a serial number. The brochure that came with it told what caliber/gauge it was.
Maybe back then it wasn't required.
 
I've onl
Barrels need to be marked with caliber.
All prefits are stamped on the breech end.

478.92 specifically references "licensed manufacturers and licensed importers".
So, this is a bit of a gray area for a smith that has an 01, in my opinion.

In addition to the SN engraved on the receiver, "additional information" on the "frame, receiver or barrel" must contain: model, caliber/gauge, name/city/state of operation.

For those of us with 07's, it's black and white.

May or may not be "illegal" if no caliber engraved by an 01 smith, but it's certainly a common sense safety requirement. Without an engraving, a chamber cast is required to know the chambering.
Criterion laser-etches the cartridge on their pre-fit barrels "radially", so no matter where the barrel ends up headspace-wise, you can read it.
 
I’ve seen plenty of AR barrels that are not marked or if anything, they mite just have the rifling rate of twist. I can’t say this is the main reason, but there have been quite a few AR 223 Rem./5.56 barrels that had a 300 Blackout bullet try to transit the tube. Makes for an interesting day at the gun range. Only if you’re four or so benches away from the excitement.
 
^^^
Fair point- but remember- AR lowers are mostly engraved "Cal 5.56", as are factory rifles- so they are engraved on the receiver. Those that are engraved "Multi Cal", should have the barrel engraved.

I guarantee you won't find a factory rifle that doesn't have either the receiver or barrel engraved- whether 5.56, .300 Blackout, 9mm, or anything else. I've never seen an AR barrel in anything other than 5.56 not be engraved, it's the "default" for the AR platform- for many years, it was all there was commercially.
 
Receiver markings were only required on post 1968 receivers . Many commercial mausers and 22s , including British ( which have the ser num on barrel up to a certain date ) and german post war guns had scrubed receivers by the gunsmith . I have many FN single shot commercial receivers without ser numbers and have only recently had an issue. It seems the Atfe has modified the 4473 when they went digital, and eliminated the choice of none as the ser number .
Barrel cal markings are required by gunsmiths now , I think .
 
Receiver markings were only required on post 1968 receivers . Many commercial mausers and 22s , including British ( which have the ser num on barrel up to a certain date ) and german post war guns had scrubed receivers by the gunsmith . I have many FN single shot commercial receivers without ser numbers and have only recently had an issue. It seems the Atfe has modified the 4473 when they went digital, and eliminated the choice of none as the ser number .
Barrel cal markings are required by gunsmiths now , I think .
Whats the regulations on shipping one of those old actions for service with no ser no?
 
I wonder if they come under the collector firearm conditions at that point?
I get in old milsurps for work all the time.
After the GCA 1968, importers used less conspicuous import markings- usually on the barrel.
In 2002, depth requirement of .003 added and they were made more conspicuous on the receivers.

I've had many pre-02 imports that had no S/N, and they're logged in as such. Sometimes I'll get just the stripped receiver- no barrel, so no importer, and no S/N either.
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
165,847
Messages
2,204,082
Members
79,148
Latest member
tsteinmetz
Back
Top