You need to also factor in whether the buyer has a Class 3 C&R FFL, and whether or not the revolver is a qualified C&R firearm.
If all that is true, all you need to have it shipped to you directly is a long gun permit.
Worked for me when I had my Nagant M1895 revolver shipped to me. i still had to register, since it was not a loose powder revolver, but at least I skipped the whole FFL process.
Just something else to consider when asking the question. A C&R FFL is easy to get, and it's relatively cheap to afford if you use it occasionally.
Well now I'm confused again.
I'd be the buyer, I don't have a C&R license, and I don't even have a long gun PTA at the moment. This would be a repro Remington 1858, not a C&R gun. But it'd be a cap-and-ball gun, not a cartridge conversion.
So would I need a permit to acquire, and if so what permit?
Reading the law, I don't see why I wouldn't need a permit the same as any other pistol.
"Antique pistol or revolver" means any pistol or revolver manufactured before 1899 and any replica thereof if it either is not designed or redesigned for using rimfire or conventional centerfire fixed ammunition or is designed or redesigned to use rimfire or conventional centerfire fixed ammunition that is no longer manufactured in the United States and is not readily available in the ordinary channels of commercial trade.
(Note that Hawaii's language here closely copies
the Federal language, but excludes the part that classifies muzzle-loading black powder weapons as "antique firearms" instead of "firearms".)
So per Hawaii a cap-and-ball Remington 1858 is an "antique pistol or revolver".
I don't see where the state law cares whether anything is a muzzle loader or not.
Seems like the gun is a "firearm" according to the state definition. (
"Firearm" means any weapon, for which the operating force is an explosive, including but not limited to pistols, revolvers, rifles, shotguns, automatic firearms, noxious gas projectors, mortars, bombs, and cannon.)
If it is a firearm, the barrel is under 16", so I reckon it's a "pistol or revolver".
(
"Pistol" or "revolver" means any firearm of any shape with a barrel less than sixteen inches in length and capable of discharging loaded ammunition or any noxious gas.)
So since it's a barrel under 16", why wouldn't I need a one-time permit to acquire?
§134-2 Permits to acquire. (a) No person shall acquire the ownership of a firearm, whether usable or unusable, serviceable or unserviceable, modern or antique, registered under prior law or by a prior owner or unregistered, either by purchase, gift, inheritance, bequest, or in any other manner, whether procured in the State or imported by mail, express, freight, or otherwise, until the person has first procured from the chief of police of the county of the person's place of business or, if there is no place of business, the person's residence or, if there is neither place of business nor residence, the person's place of sojourn, a permit to acquire the ownership of a firearm as prescribed in this section. §134-2 Permits to acquire. ... (e) ... Permits to acquire a pistol or revolver shall require a separate application and permit for each transaction. But obviously I'm missing something because I don't see where there's a curio & relic carveout either. (The only special rules I see for antiques is that they can't be assault pistols... Just because Federal law considers something an "antique firearm" and not a "firearm", doesn't mean Hawaii doesn't consider it a "firearm" as well as an "antique pistol" as well as a "pistol" or "revolver"?)
(For what it's worth, three FFL's I talked to told me there was no need for a permit and no need for registration. But it also seems like percussion caps are impossible to get out here, so that sorta sinks the idea anyways.)