So what kind of bonafide business? Supply/import/repair?
I would have thought the import/supply side would be easily saturated as no one is allowed them bar police etc and they wont be buying every day. Just seems a bit strange there are quite a few people with section 5 authorisation so if they aint selling/supplying then how do they get it and for what purpose does the home secretary grant.
I'm probably missing something obvious here I think
I know that companies that develope and manufacture optics/body armour/bulletproof glass etc can get Sec5 authority for testing purposes.I think film armourers can as well.I think I heard somewhere that museums and historic collections can as well but may have dreamt that bit.
I think with optics manufacturers they need to test how the optics will cope with sustained semi/full auto recoil etc.
"The only real power comes out of a long rifle." - Joseph Stalin
Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank.....give a man a bank and he can rob the world!.
Just out of interest, are all section 5 authorities the same? i.e. if you're an RFD, can you one day decide you want to furnish maritime security with their semi-auto firearms and have various section 5 firearms in your vault?
There are various types of Sec 5, if you're selling handguns after converting them to 2 shot for humane despatch then you won't be allowed full auto stuff unless authorised, with an application that explains why you need to have.
Edgar Brothers supply a lot of the dealers here with handguns. I would assume sec 5 lets them sell handguns but not take them home and to the range etc.
All the Heritage Pistol sites need a S5 auth (because the Heritage exemption, s 7.3 F(A)A 97, only applies to FAC holders so the pistols are S5 when not in the owners' hands).