It could mean one of two things
"FireArms Certificate" in Canada or
United Kingdom "FireArms Certificate" in England.
It's a Certificate from Law enforcement to own a high powered air rifle
FAC = Firearms Certificate in Canada
USMC aircraft that can have a primary mission of air-to-air and or air-to-ground
There called C02 air rifles or PCP air rifles
If you are talking about things like M4 and M16 then those are just the names of different types of rifles.
Sheridan air rifles who is owned by Crosman Sheridans are 5mm air rifles
As far as I understand it's very restrictive. This is a summary of how it was about ten years ago: "Anything vaguely handgun shaped is prohibited. Centrefire semi-auto rifles are banned. Rifles over .27" in calibre are banned. Firearm Certificates have a Irish L100 licensing fee, and a separate FAC is required per gun. Licenses have to be renewed yearly. All guns require an FAC - even air rifles. There may not be a requirement to be a member of a club or a training requirement expressly written into the law, but to get a license without being a member of a club is next to impossible." I recommend checking with this organisation for the latest updates: http://www.targetshootingireland.org Cheers, Tom Walls
no those are airguns. .22 bullet rifles are used in the Olympics --------------------correct answer:----------------- .177 caliber air rifles are used in the Olympics. These are high quality match air rifles.
These excellent rifles are made in Turkey.
The latin root "fac- or fic-" all means "make/do." Some words containing this root are facile, factory, malefactor, manufacture, and artifact.
Fac-to-ry has three syllables.
Air rifles can push a lead pellet at or close to the speed of sound. Yes they are lethal, and very accurate.
You mean Air Rifle. Yes this is fine. Air rifles (Not AirSoft) usually fire between 500 FPS and 1200 FPS