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#3 | ||||||
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An 85% gun historically sells for much more than lesser condition guns. An 85% gun is very rare. Condition is commonly overstated. Sure its an 85% gun? 85% would look near new.
A 1914 C would have ejectors as standard. Post photos. |
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#4 | ||||||
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A ch grade would be a good one to have. My current goal is to some day have a ch grade for my personal collection. As stated, you should start by checking the serial number against the surviving records, if there are records on it. This will tell you if the gun is in it's original configuration. Then confirm the price against the condition of the gun. And of course check the gun's function 100%. Check lockup, operation, and if it is a Che; make sure the ejectors work. If it is at a gun shop, I am sure the price high enough that the seller would be willing to allow you to spend enough time with the gun for inspection, if it means a sale.
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B. Dudley |
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#5 | ||||||
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You guys are great! Serial #169481. To answer Bruce's question, no, I'm definitly not sure it's an 85% gun. I can tell you that the receiver where the engraving is located is quite silver with very little case color. The action lever is also silver no case or blueing. The barrels are 80 percent blue maybe a little better. Stock is very good with some handling dings but no major gouges, but there is a tiny hairline crack behind the top tang. The checkering has some flattening but overall it's good. Mechanically it appears sound. I'm not an expert so I could miss something. It has 2 beads both are ivory. Because the frame, top lever and trigger gaurd are pretty bright silver with mimimum case color I suspect that the previous owner may have done some light cleaning? Thanks agian for any thoughts.
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#6 | ||||||
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169481 according to the book is 12 bore grade 4 with Acme steel barrel with 30 inch barrels a capped pistol grip stock and no extras.
so it sounds original - except I might wonder about skeet and full. Its possible it was ordered that way, but also possible the right barrel as been opened.
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"If there is a heaven it must have thinning aspen gold, and flighting woodcock, and a bird dog" GBE |
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#7 | ||||||
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I forgot to mention that the bores are bright and appear very good. Question: What is a "grade Four"?
Assuming that my discription is accurate, is this gun worth $6,000? |
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#8 | ||||||
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A PGCA letter could tell you what the original chokes were. A picture may help us determine the actual condition. Good luck. Not a lot of C grades in retail stores.
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#9 | ||||||
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Case colors do not show up as much on heavily engraved frames. Traces that are left can get lost in the engraving. If the gun does not have ejectors, then it would have been special ordered that way and the order credited the cost for the ejectors, I believe $25. The guard would blued, so if it is all silver, than that is a diecent amount of wear.
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B. Dudley |
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#10 | ||||||
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A Grade 4 is a C grade. $6000 is a bunch of money unless the gun is in rather high condition. It doesn't sound like it qualifies for that price range.
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