Depends on your state. Free states, you hand it to them and forget about it. Federally speaking, you can "gift" a firearm to anyone but you may be held liable in court if they're a felon or use the gun during the commission of a crime. States that require license/permitting or registration of handguns are going to have their own nuances. Don't think of it as "lending" but rather transferring ownership for a period of time and then having ownership transferred back to you at a later date without the exchange of money. With that said, if you have any slight reservation about the person you're handing that gun over to, have them sign a bill of sale and write "gift" or $0 in the boxes concerning the price. Ultimately, there's not any good reason to lend someone a gun when HD shotguns and poly 9s can be had for under $250 unless you're lending someone a rifle/shotgun for a hunting trip or something. Even then, I'd be pretty uncomfortable with the whole situation.
Jesus Christ you ESL turds are intolerable. No one understands what you're asking. Are you asking about passing a gun from one person to another? Or how to swap a gun from your left hand to your right hand?
one hand, standard grip with trigger discipline, aim gun at ground and pass the gun so that the top of the slide is facing the person receiving the gun.
the receiver is to grab the top of the slide
while keeping pointed downrange, grab from underneath under the front of the gun in front of the trigger guard with left hand and reposition yourself and rotate your body to face them while keeping the pistol pointed downrange so that the next shooter can walk up and take a normal grasp on the grip while keeping it in a safe direction.
For a pistol I always hold it by the barrel and hand it to them. That way if it does go off it'll only hit me.
For a long gun just about everyone holds it up and both parties grip somewhere near the middle.
GIWTWM
fbpb
Aino Kishi???
Depends on your state. Free states, you hand it to them and forget about it. Federally speaking, you can "gift" a firearm to anyone but you may be held liable in court if they're a felon or use the gun during the commission of a crime. States that require license/permitting or registration of handguns are going to have their own nuances. Don't think of it as "lending" but rather transferring ownership for a period of time and then having ownership transferred back to you at a later date without the exchange of money. With that said, if you have any slight reservation about the person you're handing that gun over to, have them sign a bill of sale and write "gift" or $0 in the boxes concerning the price. Ultimately, there's not any good reason to lend someone a gun when HD shotguns and poly 9s can be had for under $250 unless you're lending someone a rifle/shotgun for a hunting trip or something. Even then, I'd be pretty uncomfortable with the whole situation.
No you fool I meant how to borrow from another hand. Why do you think that picture was there from the first place?
Jesus Christ you ESL turds are intolerable. No one understands what you're asking. Are you asking about passing a gun from one person to another? Or how to swap a gun from your left hand to your right hand?
ESL website
Put it on a table after checking it's unloaded, then let the other person pick it up.
What about pistols?
one hand, standard grip with trigger discipline, aim gun at ground and pass the gun so that the top of the slide is facing the person receiving the gun.
the receiver is to grab the top of the slide
This.
Why would a pistol be any different moron.
That better be a belt fed bolt gun and not just clever photography. I want to believe.
>he doesn't wiener and lock and toss to his partner from behind cover
You're already dead.
>remove magazine
>clear action
>lock action open
>hand to other person
Load gun
Safety off
Press into friend barrel first
Pussy forward on slide with thumb firmly
Pull trigger
while keeping pointed downrange, grab from underneath under the front of the gun in front of the trigger guard with left hand and reposition yourself and rotate your body to face them while keeping the pistol pointed downrange so that the next shooter can walk up and take a normal grasp on the grip while keeping it in a safe direction.
ITT; actual morons
>/k/ - Semi-Literate
For a pistol I always hold it by the barrel and hand it to them. That way if it does go off it'll only hit me.
For a long gun just about everyone holds it up and both parties grip somewhere near the middle.
Just point it down when you give it over, no one is at risk
unload it (hand gun)
put it on the table, rotate it 90 degrees, slide it towards them and remove your hand from the firearm. let them puck it up.
It is not yet your time.