$1000 would be for a rough Israeli.
$1000 would be for a rough Israeli. A non-israeli with a decent stock, etc would be worth more if the bbl is ok. Maybe $1200-1400 or so?
Best bet would be to have it torn down, turn in the receiver, and sell the kit on the EE.
Some of those Israeli's were not so rough. Slightly under $1000 got me mostly TRW major components and parts with very little wear and a 62 dated barrel that looks shiny and pristine. I guess I was lucky with what the guys at Wolverine picked out for my order?
I'm not suggesting a lot of the parts weren;t serviceable, but I got a handful of their kits and most of the parts gauged a worn to well-worn. All of the stocks were altered, some were missing small parts and pins, many of the GI barrels (regular contour) gauged with a fair bit of throat erosion and all of them showed evidence of have been used for sustained full auto fire at some point (or else very very high round counts).
Many visible parts were crudely electropencilled and about half the op rod tabs I got were worn to the point of needing corrective welding.
a light use non-israeli gun that had no issues would be worth a little more money in my personal opinion.
which is why I won't buy IDF resale parts on the EE, the best parts are picked, the rejects , sold.
$1000 would be for a rough Israeli. A non-israeli with a decent stock, etc would be worth more if the bbl is ok. Maybe $1200-1400 or so?
Best bet would be to have it torn down, turn in the receiver, and sell the kit on the EE.
genuine E2 buttstocks and forward grips.
Umm,,, 12.3,,, M-14's
To the best of my recollection, back in the mid 1980's, these were all originally IDF rifles.
I personally know the original importer from Toronto (who I will not name) who brought these and most of all the C/A rifles into Canada.
This person had to hand over the reigns as Importer due to a conflict of interest and that's all I will say on the subject.
All the C/A's that came to Canada were purchased, housed and converted in England.
At one time or another, I dam near owned one of everything that came into the country.
I spent many hours in a warehouse sitting besides piles of C/A's as I was Cherry Picking.
Back in the late 80's - early 90's, no one even cared about these.
You could not even sell a complete set for $50.00
Umm,,, 12.3,,, M-14's
To the best of my recollection, back in the mid 1980's, these were all originally IDF rifles.
I personally know the original importer from Toronto (who I will not name) who brought these and most of all the C/A rifles into Canada.
This person had to hand over the reigns as Importer due to a conflict of interest and that's all I will say on the subject.
All the C/A's that came to Canada were purchased, housed and converted in England.
At one time or another, I dam near owned one of everything that came into the country.
I spent many hours in a warehouse sitting beside a pile of C/A's I was Cherry Picking.
Back in the late 80's - early 90's, no one even cared about these.
You could not even sell a complete set for $50.00
I'm not sure all m14's were Israeli, and I'm also not of the opinion that the current batch, with 30 more years of IDF use on them, are the same condition as what was around in the 1980's and 1990s.
Back in the early 90's, I had a few c/a m14's and none of them had IDF electropencil anywhere on them. They were as-issued guns with mostly correct parts. Fwiw. Maybe they didn't come from the IDF? Dunno.
Any M14 kit's value is a function of the condition of the parts it is comprised of, imho. Good parts are priced relative to well worn ones.
Fast fwd to today, and I still would not pay $50 for an E2 set, unless it was to flip it. Yuck. Not exactly geared to tight group shooting in my experience.




























