If you plan on keeping and using the gun for 10 years or longer I have no problem spending some cash. I can remember in 2004 there was a Valtro for sale for $1100 and I was having a real hard time justifying the cost. Luckily the salesman at P&D talked me into it and man am I glad he did. Right now I wouldn't sell that gun for less than $4000 and even then I'd have to think twice. Looking back if I had spent $4000 on it that would equate to less than $400 per year that I've had it and I could easily justify that as a solid purchase especially considering I'll probably have it for another 20 years or longer. At $1100 it has cost me $100 per year so far and over the course of it's time with me may cost me around $35 per year or so.
Last year I purchased a Nighthawk doublestack for $4000 and a year in I have zero regrets and I'm pretty sure I'll have this one for the long run too.
I've seen guys f around with guns in competition that cost them less than what they would spend on ammo in a year and it can range from a general annoyance to costing them a match and I can never understand it. People have different thoughts about the reliability of 1911's but in my opinion the good ones just don't let you down. My Valtro has had exactly zero malfunctions.
X2 re the Valtro's. I too picked my first one up for around 1100.00 back in 01 or 02. Best 1911 I've ever owned. Had the pleasure of talking to John Jardine on a few occasions. We discussed the "American" vs "Canadian" ones etc. He really was mistreated as far as distribution was concerned. At the end of the day Valtro's were all made in the same factory with the same materials albeit with or without his final inspection and tweeking. I've never had any issues with any of my Valtro's . Prices in the U.S are stratospheric but I think that Canadian prices will keep rising. They haven't been made for years.
what do you mean by mistreated, Gravel? Just curious. I've heard a little bit about these guns and the story behind them but not much. Didn't realize they sold for only $1100 13-14 years ago when now they are 3-4K+. Anyway, i guess they are very highly regarded with quite a cult following these days.
thanks. interesting. Beautiful guns. Love the smoothed out edges
I've owned 2x Valtros 1998A1, one very early 002xx serial and the other in the 003xx range. Bought them for around $1300 back in the days. They were great 1911's, superb trigger (after I tweaked it a little), great blueing, french borders, attention to details...etc, the italians sure knew how to craft those pistols to make them look good. Never had a major issue with any of the two while function sometime needed a little tweaking...
That said, I've owned a few high end 1911's and I would rate the Valtro at the level of the DW Valor, sure looks better with that rich blueing & those french borders but beside that, it's on par with the Valor. If I take everything into considertation, the Ed Brown Executive Target, Custom Shop SA Pro Operator, SV single stack & LB Prowler III I own/owned are more accurate, reliable and a better value overall if you can afford to drop that kind of cash on a range toy. Considering paying over $2.5k for a used Valtro (even if it's in mint condition) is insane.
Sure, the Jardine legend lives in the US and these pistols selling new for $1200 15 years ago are now going for $5k on gun auction / selling sites that is if you can find them. Not a lot were manufactured in the first place and all the ones that originally came in the US were tuned in the Jardine shop so that they were up to specs (you know that the italians manufacture beautiful things on the outside but sometimes the internals are the opposite and need tweaking). Lots of hype was into them from Jardine's afficionados in the first place, don't get me wrong here, Jardine is an awesome smith and did run a great shop back then but let's face it, that's what's driving these crazy prices, nothing else...
The ones sold in Canada and the rest of the world didn't went through Jardine's shop (or went back to Italy because they were out of specs) so weren't tuned. When Jardine heard about Valtro bypassing him and selling the out of specs pistols to other partys a little war began since he had a contract with Valtro and they weren't suppose to do that in the first place, that was in early 2001 or 2002. Soon after that legal battle started, the 1998A1 was history...
Those LB's, SA Pro, Ed Brown sure were more $ than the Valtro back then but my opinion is that there's no way the Valtro is a better pistol than let's say a semi-custom Les Baer PM II w/ 1.5 option that you can buy now for about $2500 and I will rate it on par with a DW Valor that run for $2000.
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