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#13 | ||||||
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Buy rare, buy condition and buy early. This applies to all collector guns. The biggest "bang for the buck" is in classic Winchesters for rifles, Colts for pistols and Parkers for classic double barreled shotguns. The price or value of top condition "field" grade guns tends to be higher on Winchesters and Colts than Parkers due to the much greater demand. For every Parker collector there are at least 100 Winchester collectors and 50 Colt collectors. High grade, special ordered guns from all three makers tend to be very similarly priced or valued. As Bill said. small bore and large bore (.410, 28, and 8) parkers tend to be the highest priced when same grades are compared. The same tends to hold true for rifles and pistols. A 50/110 Winchester 86 is worth at least 3 or 4 times as much as a .33. Find an original .22 single action army and you have value multiple times over a .38. The reason is the same for all three makes. They all made a lot fewer big uns and little uns.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Bill Zachow For Your Post: |
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#14 | ||||||
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Parkers, Parkers, Parkers. Winchesters and Colts are a different world with way different rates of appreciation. Leave them out of this discussion.
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#15 | ||||||
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Why? Very few of us only collect Parkers and the same rules of valuation apply to all makes of collectable firearms.
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#16 | ||||||
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when collecting guns for investment, there are two magic words:
Colt and Winchester. shotguns are traditional not good investments. |
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#17 | ||||||
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This is a great discussion with comments by some very knowledgeable Parkerites. I completely agree with Pete,Brian,Robin,Edgar and Bill and suggest you really study their statements. Personally I have found small gage high conditions Parkers that I have owned have appreciated the most, by far. I think it is very difficult to make a decent profit on guns purchased from dealers. I would purchase the highest grade, high condition small bore that I could afford but condition over grade. The other thing is be patient.
JMHO David |
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to David Dwyer For Your Post: |
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#18 | ||||||
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Of course, Zachow is right. Putting Colts and Winchesters into the discussion will educate us all. But they are so different from shotguns in that almost any special order feature or almost any interesting provenance will put their value into the stratosphere. Not so much with shotguns unless the provenance is off the scale.
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#19 | ||||||
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David
So a VHE in 80% would be better then a DHE in 60% all other things equal? Also I agree listen to all that try and help Thats why I asked here Where could you get better answers We are lucky to have you all Thanks…. |
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#20 | ||||||
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While finding a VH in 80% condition may be somewhat difficult, being the 'working' gun, almost 80,000 V grade hammerless guns compared to less than 18,000 D grade hammerless gun would still make a D in 60% worth more to me than an 80% V. Also, the distinction in quantifying condition is often very fuzzy, at best
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