.44 associate
32 Cal
- Joined
- Nov 22, 2019
- Messages
- 34
- Reaction score
- 6
Does anyone suppose the owner of this gun would ever sell it?
The worries about "value" - presumably monetary value - strike me as rather cold. The value to this owner, it seems to me, has far more to do with his father than about what he could theoretically get at auction. If the gentleman wants to spend the considerable amount of money it takes to properly restore a gun like this, then I would think the "value" to him would render financial matters essentially irrelevant.
If nothing else, a well-used '51 Navy is not a very rare thing and doesn't fetch all that much at auction. I'd be surprised if this gun went for a thousand dollars - and I wouldn't be surprised if the bill for a first-class restoration was twice that. So I'm not sure that purely financial considerations are at play here at all.
The worries about "value" - presumably monetary value - strike me as rather cold. The value to this owner, it seems to me, has far more to do with his father than about what he could theoretically get at auction. If the gentleman wants to spend the considerable amount of money it takes to properly restore a gun like this, then I would think the "value" to him would render financial matters essentially irrelevant.
If nothing else, a well-used '51 Navy is not a very rare thing and doesn't fetch all that much at auction. I'd be surprised if this gun went for a thousand dollars - and I wouldn't be surprised if the bill for a first-class restoration was twice that. So I'm not sure that purely financial considerations are at play here at all.