Whew! Some feeling put into a few posts. I guess I'm not a "real" collector. The OP's rifle sounds like a nice one. Would love to see some pics. Funny how a Finn "captures" don't seem to draw the negative fire that the Russian ones do. If anybody doctored up rifles, it was the Finns. I have quite a few M91's that are a glorious jumble of makers' parts and Finn fixes. RC's are still 98's, carry the history with them. As some have posted, they do make good shooters.
Dare I make a suggestion on the value? Sure. First of all, it is always safe to put a "value" on a rifle when there is no chance I'll ever get to actually buy it. I would say the rifle should sell for $600-$850, or, better yet, whatever the buyer is willing to pay.
Don't get to concerned about the biases of other people. That's the beauty of collecting. I can remember a time when people only collected receivers, without bolts, because they took up less room in their basement. I bought a few dozen rifles from such collectors, minus the receivers of course. Most were in excellent condition. That was back when these rifles could be purchased for under $20.
RC98s are an historical fact. They weren't rebuilt to be sold for surplus. Many of them were taken off the battlefields and off the streets after being abandoned. Many were new out of warehouses captured after the war but because of the damage to the buildings, had to be stripped down and refinished. Many of those rifles went to Korea, Viet Nam, and other places where the Communists were trying to arm supporters.
The Soviets never threw anything away that may prove useful later. A lot of the RC98s we come across didn't come out of Russia but were stored by satellites for war emergency purposes, until other more suitable firearms became available.
Let me give you some examples. Member Purple has commented on more than one occasion about the sidearms he encountered during his UN tours and other postings around the world. The pistols the Finns carried were some of those. They were their model 1923 Lugers, converted to 9mm. Shortly after he saw them, they were all refurbished and went into emergency reserve storage. Most had been converted to 9mm from their previous 7.62 mm.
In 1969, some Portuguese/Angolan police and even some of their Militia were issued Lugers in 9mm.
The Finn Lugers were sold a few years ago on the surplus markets. Back in the eighties a few Portuguese Lugers were on the markets.
Look at Canada, we're still issuing a very decent/serviceable P35 HiPower that was built during WWII. Many of these pistols were sold off as surplus in the sixties, NIB. Many of the retained pistols have been rebuilt. It was mentioned here that many of them sport new Belgian replacement barrels and parts.
It's all part of their history. It's the choice of the collector whether or not to include these examples in their collections as representative pieces.
I know a couple of members on CGN that can't afford to collect milsurps but still like them so they collect representative pictures in albums that have a spectacular number of pic of the different variants.
It's all about being in the right place at the right time.
Many of the older collectors are on their way to the afterlife. Their collections are usually being broken up and sold off. We get the chance to care for these pieces for a short time, then it's someone else's turn, usually at a significant price.
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