Jeff Hayes
Regular Member
Only item you can't put in a safe deposit by law is cash
Interesting short read on Safety Deposit boxes.
http://www.bankrate.com/brm/news/bank/20011023a.asp
Only item you can't put in a safe deposit by law is cash
Interesting short read on Safety Deposit boxes.
http://www.bankrate.com/brm/news/bank/20011023a.asp
Wait. What?
You want to travel around the country without your firearm in an RV? Why?
Why not join KOA, Good Sam or just find small campgrounds on the cheap?
The bank doesn't know what you have in your box, isn't supposed to know (by design), and can't know unless they take extraordinary measures to break into the box.
If your plutonium sets off the DHS radiation alarms, or the body parts you collected start to leak into other boxes, they might have a reason to break in. For a gun? No way.
Don't ask, don't tell.
As for the gun(s), remove any magazines, lock open the action, hose everything down liberally with Birchwood-Casey "Sheath" preservative, then wrap it in VCI paper. It will be good for at least a couple of years. (In reality, it will be good for decades like that, but you will want to check on it and give it a fresh treatment at least every 2-3 years. Plus, you should shoot it when you're home; it's good karma. )
Can we use the correct terms here? It's "safe-deposit box". That's it. No such thing as a safety deposit box.
While there are options, KOA bans firearms from all their "Kampgrounds".
I don't believe Good Sam does. Searching their website for "firearm" turns up a long list of discussions on their forums:
http://www.goodsamclub.com/siteSear...96814:g-hall1ppfk&cof=FORID:11;NB:1&q=firearm
While there are options, KOA bans firearms from all their "Kampgrounds".
I don't believe Good Sam does. Searching their website for "firearm" turns up a long list of discussions on their forums:
http://www.goodsamclub.com/siteSear...96814:g-hall1ppfk&cof=FORID:11;NB:1&q=firearm
That doesn't say you can't put cash in a safety deposit box,it says its illegal to conceal cash to avoid taxes. Conceal doesn't mean hide in a box, it means conceal it from the IRS
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Please cite where I am required to disclose my cash in hand to the IRS in the first place.
If there is no law requiring disclosure then the law you mention is moot.
The only payments, I can find, that are required to be reported to the IRS are taxable payments made to non-resident aliens, foreign corporations, and foreign tax exempt corporations.
Vacuum sealers can suck the lubricant out of the gun. Were it me, I'd use a vacuum sealable bag, use the vacuum to remove the normal air, then immediately replace it with dry nitrogen gas. Short of a hermetically sealed hard case, that's about as secure as you can make it against corrosion.
"inexpensive disposable hand warmers" work by oxidation of iron. No nitrogen involved, no release of N2 gas.
Just to further quibble: I'm not aware of any iron rusting reactions that produce CO2. Yes, removing the oxygen might itself be a good thing, but it's not being "pushed up and out" by anything, it's combining with the Fe ...
The more I think of this, the more unconfortable I am with the idea of introducing a lot of powdered Iron into your 'hermetic' package. Do we have any chemists, metallurgists, or gunsmiths that can weigh in on this?
OK, if you can believe the internet... the common iron-based hand warmers also typically contain SALT as a catalyst. That does it for me! I'll stick with recommending a good cleaning, a coat of your favorite gun oil, and a packet of silica gel inside a good-quality sealed bag.