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#16
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having reloaded commercially for a while back yonder..I can say unequivocally it ain't worth doing. I did shotshells mostly and found out a lot of stuff about liability. My insurance was terribly expensive and found out that homeowners insurance was useless for almost anything firearm related...much less anything commercial gun related. Even if the insurance company will cover anything you may be doing for a friend..they want to settle quickly. Leaving you kinda holding the bag...even through no fault of yours. And even when they do settle, any agreement they might make covers them ...not you most of the time. I once had an insurance company(agent, really) that wanted to cancel my homeowners just because I had reloading equipment/supplies. Tried to say powder etc was an explosive. Ok to have gasoline acetylene etc in the garage but powder?? Nah. Didn't happen though once I dealt with the company itself. Insurance companies are not always your friends as depicted on the good hands commercials. LOL I moved all the powder I had to a powder magazine behind the barn. But there were times I had quite a bit of powder. Had a small building out there with 5 old reefers or freezers. You can store up to 100 lbs in one
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skeet@huntchat.com Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote!" Benjamin Franklin Last edited by skeet; 08-21-2010 at 09:52 AM. |
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