Read and Weep.... the good old days...

good old days ?

and a case of Ben Ginter's beer was $2, but they taped two dimes inside the box because the BC Government would not allow them to sell cheaper.
Unfortunately, there was only money for one case of beer a month then, if I was lucky.
Money was a lot harder to come by in those days.

Most of our fun stuff is actually cheaper today when you account for inflation and increased earning power.
 
My father was making 3-4 $/hour & 15 $/day subsistence working motorhand on drilling rigs in '72. That's 47 $ day before tax.
That was pretty big coin in the day. A days wages for a decent surplus rifle; seems fair.
Motorhand makes 27 $/hour & 150/ day sub now. Can we buy the same rifle for 366 $ ? Maybe not the snipers; but we can get a nice 6.5 Swede for 350ish.
I don't think things have changed too much.
Just gun's that were common then are not now, some of the common one's now were unheard of then.
IMO
 
now it;s the SKS`s, Nagants, Swedes, Swiss and other Milspec assortment factor the past to present and a 200.00 SKS is only a day and a bit pay for so many on this board!!
 
Cased Lewis Machine gun, wood chest, 8 drums, drum loader, spare barrel and parts, anti-aircraft sights................$60.00

OMF...:yingyang:...wow....:eek:

now it;s the SKS`s, Nagants, Swedes, Swiss and other Milspec assortment factor the past to present and a 200.00 SKS is only a day and a bit pay for so many on this board!!

If you ignore the "ammo-price-factor" :p , you can still find some very sweet & affordable Swede Mausers...:cheers:
 
In 1971 my Father bought a brand new house in a brand new sub-division in North Vancouver (Upper Lonsdale). He paid $31,000. He was an assistant branch manager at a Western Canada head office of a large national insurance company (The Royal). He was making $13,000 per year ($250/week) plus a "company car" (all expenses paid). His house cost him 2.4 times his annual salary (my parents considered it well beyond what they should buy). What happened? I want that same house for 2.4 times the annual salary of a assistant manager who makes about $120,000 per year now. $288,000 please! I'll take it. Hahaha. CGNers from other parts of Canada (like Winnipeg) might not see the problem here.

Here: you should play Crack Shack or Mansion? (Vancouver real estate parody)

http://www.crackshackormansion.com/
 
and a case of Ben Ginter's beer was $2, but they taped two dimes inside the box because the BC Government would not allow them to sell cheaper.
Unfortunately, there was only money for one case of beer a month then, if I was lucky.
Money was a lot harder to come by in those days.

Most of our fun stuff is actually cheaper today when you account for inflation and increased earning power.

If only liquor-sellers in Ontario had such "moral courage" when McGuinty started his latest alcohol-related 'moral' posturings....:(.....(or if only we had independant liquor-sellers who could choose to have such courage ! :redface:...)
 
I have an article on surplus aircraft disposal by the US military in the July 1945 issue of "Flying" magazine. Some prices; B-17 Flying Fortress-$350, B-25 Mitchell-$200, P-51 Mustang-$100, Grumman F6F Hellcat-$100, Packard Merlin V-1650 and Allison V-1710 engines-$10 each. Fuel, maintenance, and hangarage costs would have been prohibitive for Joe Average at the time, even at the giveaway prices of the aircraft.

The going price for a Mustang on the surplus aircraft market nowadays is well in excess of a million dollars. Now if only one of my relatives had bought a whole squadron of these and squirreled them away in a hangar for the past 60 yrs. Unfortunately the best they could do was to buy a Kinner radial engine for a DIY snowplane and an anti-aircraft drone engine for a DIY gyrocopter.
 
This thread was started in only June of 2008.....in only these past 2 1/2 years we can ask ourselves how prices have changed in military surplus firearm prices. What is desireable now that was not as much then?
 
How true! I used to see alot more K98 rifles being offered. At one time I thought there was an almost endless supply. As well as Arisakas. Just in a couple years they have become definitely not scarce, but less frequent on the EE.
 
Heard of those motorcycles in crates when I was a teenager in the 1960s but I never saw them advertised in any of the surplus catalogues of the time.
 
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How true! I used to see alot more K98 rifles being offered. At one time I thought there was an almost endless supply. As well as Arisakas. Just in a couple years they have become definitely not scarce, but less frequent on the EE.

When I really got into collecting (read:turned 18) I remember seeing M1 Garands for $50-$100, full wood Enfields for $175, Original Gew98's for $150, WW2 dated Wz29's and German captured VZ24(t)'s for $200...

No one wanted WW1 and earlier rifles... Especially me! All I wanted was the German stuff then, like K98's, G43s, MG34's, etc....

I should have listened to one of the Commonwealth addicts at the local gun store when he told me to buy Enfields and Garands... I was like pfft, I can get those cheap guns anytime, I want to get on the German bandwagon while I still could... sigghh, If only I knew I could have made 1000% profit and bought all the Teutonic s**t I wanted later.... :(

And this was in 2002! We've come a long way baby! ;)

When I first met you at the big Calgary gun show in 2002, I had just bought my LSR K98 Sniper for $1100, and a nice byf43 P38 for $450. It seems the P38's have not come up much in price, but the K98's sure have!

Now, when I want to get my hands on 71/84's, and Gew88's, Gew98's etc... they have almost surpassed the WW2 German stuff in price! Damn you Nabs! :p
 
This thread was started in only June of 2008.....in only these past 2 1/2 years we can ask ourselves how prices have changed in military surplus firearm prices. What is desireable now that was not as much then?

I can still remember the period in those 2 1/2 years when milsurps chambered in 7.62x51 collectively doubled (or went even higher ! ) in price on the E & E....:eek:...the FR-8's weren't selling for $500 a pop back in 2007 :( , no one even thought to offer an FR-7 for more than $200 :nest: , and Ishapore 2A/2A1's roamed a lot more frequently on the exchange ! :p

Though there's a cute and neatly-priced FR-7 in the exchange right now......
 
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i doubt that you get a decent Garand for $50 in 2002.
However, you most certainly could get a Danish rebuild at Lever Arms for $150 in around 1996. Or 4 for $500, thats $125 each.
Now going for $600-800 each.
 
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