Rifleman1776 said:
With custom rifles it's all about WHO built it.
Three custom Hawken's, side by side, with essentially the same design, furniture, barrel etc will command prices that seem picked out of the air.
Cynical attitude here.
I well understand collector value here. Baseball trading cards can be 'worth' many thousands of dollars depending on the player they show and other factors. But actual 'worth' is almost nothing. With your example, three very similar rifles and knowing nothing about who built them will bring about the same price from buyers who don't give a flip about the name of the builder. If one craftsman can build a fine rifle from quality parts and sell for $1,500.00 where is the worth in a similar rifle from Mr. Famous who asks $5,000.00 for his?
From the forend shaping the rifle pictured here is likely an assembled kit. The big difference in "Mr Big Name" is that he might actually know what he is doing. So the rifle is more likely to be properly breeched and the rifle properly shaped so it actually looks like what its supposed to be. But the lines are often very subtle and many people can't see the difference even when it's pointed out. But people with an eye for line can.
Bad breeching. Looks like this from the inside. It was done by the barrel maker BTW.
Experienced makers check this before using the barrel and correct as needed. Why does a maker installed breech need correcting? Because correctly breeching a barrel takes too much time and could add $100 to the barrel cost.
And causes this fouling trap.
When cleaned it looked like this. The rebate was actually up in the bore rather than sealing it.
This is a proper job and will not leak fouling into the breech threads or those of the vent liner.
Then there is wood work and fits. How the lock and triggers are set up and work properly together and are SAFE. Many do not from the maker and some have errors built in that will cause problems in service. Experienced makers know how to fix lock and trigger issues. Beginners don't even know there is a problem. Here is view of a finished locks tumbler and how it passes through the plate as I received it. Its from one of the major names in locks.
This puts the sear out of alignment with the sear notches in the tumbler and will result in excess wear and eventual failure. I welded the tumbler hole shut and redrilled it in the proper place, reamed it, then turned the as cast tumbler shaft to fit and to smooth it so the tumbler would not enlarge the tumbler hole in service. There were other needed mods as well but this the one that was really visual and the most serious from the standpoint of safety.
So there is a difference in what comes out of the shop even when the parts purchased are all the same.
Dan