Would it hurt the value of an original rifle if I had Hoyt rebore and rifle the barrel to a caliber that was original to the makers calibers. Just wondering. We discussed this this morning at the coffee shop and had 2 different opinions.
There are those who hold that an historical artifact, here a gun, should be conserved/preserved as is. Like an insect in amber. That is not my take. If it can be safely used and not damaged I say why not? The very history of the gun is tied up with its use.
When I need a tool I will likely go to Joy's Antiques, where there is an amazing variety of old tools. I do not do it for price. I do it for the pleasure of it. Beats the mortal hell out of Homey Depot, Lowes, and Ace Hardware.
I look at the old wooden molding planes and think about how much trim they cut for how many homes. Lots of sharpening stones and jigs with those old tools. How many sharpening stones and how much oil do you find in the big box stores?
Ditto with firearms. Aside from personal defense/carry weapons, most modern firearms bore me. And I do not love the carry weapons like I love a flintlock rifle.
Once it's been cut, it's no longer original. However... as a shooter it then becomes a 'useable semi original' and that makes it more valuable to me.Would it hurt the value of an original rifle if I had Hoyt rebore and rifle the barrel to a caliber that was original to the makers calibers. Just wondering. We discussed this this morning at the coffee shop and had 2 different opinions.
Sure, why not? I've got shoeboxes full of those things.so if you find a beautiful flint arrowhead do you tie it to a stick and shoot it out of you bow????
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