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there was a very rare edition hercules pen gun .38 caliber defender , that now has become worth a fortune, i believe the last one known to sell sold for 162,500.00 there was only like 30 of them made. d1913 seriaLnumber they say is priceless, they have the only one to be found is in a private auction, but the item says not for sale ,just for display only.
No
agent orange, vx gas, mustard gas. seran
10-60 usd
He was the son of zeus. He was halfgod halfhuman. he had a horse named pegaso. He was greek. He is part of the constelations
cadburys was seconded as a munitions maker during WW2 including making gas-masks for the general public.
A model 35 tear gas projector was an American police arm. It was manufactured by Hercules Gas Munitions Corp. based out of Chicago, IL. There were several other models of these types of tear gas projectors and they would shoot tear gas cartrigages. Some models would shoot 12 gauge shells filled with tear gas, other 20 and .410 gauge. The model 35 would use .38 Special cartrigages filled with tear gas. As far as I know this was the smallest of the projectors which is about 5 inches in length finished with a black finish, brass fittings, and closely reseambles a fountain pen.
IF your gas gun is capable of chambering and firing a round of live ball ammunition (some of the older ones were) then it requires licensing as a Class III firearm with the BATFE. Possession of an unregistered Class III is punished by 10 yrs in prison, and a fine of $250,000. If not already registered, it cannot be. If it CANNOT fire ball ammunition, then value is in the $50-$100 range. I do not believe that .38 Special tear gas ammo is still in production. Sorry-
Most of these are NOT capable of firing a regular shot shell, and are limited to a tear gas shell. IF you have one that CAN fire a regular .410 shell, then it is regulated by the Federal Govt much like a short barreled shotgun. However, the Hercules Mdl 40 is NOT capable of safely firing regular .410 shells. Value is approximately $150.
Mustard gas was never dropped from airplanes. It would have been far to dangerous for the bomb crew in WW1. The gas was packed into artillery shells and fired towards the enemy trenches. On impact, the shells would explode and the gas would disperse. If the wind didn't shift, it would then drift towards the enemy positions. Sometimes the wind would change and blow the poison in the wrong direction and gas their own men. More than 1.5 billion (yes billion) shells were fired during the war, and of them about 5% were filled with various types of gas. That still means millions of poison gas, not all of them exploded. They are still digging up unexploded gas munitions in France and Belgium. The gas canisters are very unstable now. About 200,000 shells are discovered every year in Ypres area alone. Many of them are still filled with poison gas.
I think it is a gas and gas
it gas change is were a gas changes
It is a gas.