No, not the Buffalo Springfield song rather the "estimated" value of muzzleloaders and/or muzzleloader parts/accessories.
A fairly common question, what's is an item worth, how much should I pay? It would seem good examples of traditional muzzleloaders are getting harder to find. When I read a question like "my local pawn shop, (or whoever), has a minty T/C Hawken, (or whatever make or model), they're asking $500, (or whatever price), is it a good deal?" and the response is something like, "I'd offer them $450", (or whatever), just how solid that advise is coming from someone who's never shopped for or seen the item in question.
Searching for a gun or item, especially those out of production, can be an arduous task. Certainly some folks just luck into stuff, but if you've looked around and find an item someone else, likely a person you don't even know, advises "low ball 'em" on are you getting good advice? You may find the few bucks you think you're saving upfront cost you in the long run.
If you've spent hours, days, weeks or however long trying to find whatever it is you've been looking for in the condition you want or better do you really want to pass to save a few bucks? Then there is the question of rarity. For example, how often does one run across a Green River Rifle Works gun for sale?
Thompson Center traditional muzzleloaders are a, albeit one, good example. Look at the prices good or rarer examples are selling for compared to when traditional muzzleloaders of any kind were readily available.
I wonder how may folks end up with "for what it's worth" regrets because they passed based on someone else's advise.
A fairly common question, what's is an item worth, how much should I pay? It would seem good examples of traditional muzzleloaders are getting harder to find. When I read a question like "my local pawn shop, (or whoever), has a minty T/C Hawken, (or whatever make or model), they're asking $500, (or whatever price), is it a good deal?" and the response is something like, "I'd offer them $450", (or whatever), just how solid that advise is coming from someone who's never shopped for or seen the item in question.
Searching for a gun or item, especially those out of production, can be an arduous task. Certainly some folks just luck into stuff, but if you've looked around and find an item someone else, likely a person you don't even know, advises "low ball 'em" on are you getting good advice? You may find the few bucks you think you're saving upfront cost you in the long run.
If you've spent hours, days, weeks or however long trying to find whatever it is you've been looking for in the condition you want or better do you really want to pass to save a few bucks? Then there is the question of rarity. For example, how often does one run across a Green River Rifle Works gun for sale?
Thompson Center traditional muzzleloaders are a, albeit one, good example. Look at the prices good or rarer examples are selling for compared to when traditional muzzleloaders of any kind were readily available.
I wonder how may folks end up with "for what it's worth" regrets because they passed based on someone else's advise.
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