What should I ask for a sporter Lee Enfield

ChiliDawg

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Thinking of selling a 1917 BSA Lee Enfield sporterized a long time ago. Monte Carlo stock and a 4x30 scope. It was registered as a Parker Hale if that means anything. Wood is in very good condition, blueing is good. What should I ask for this? I picked this up from an estate two years ago and only shot it today for the first time.

Thanks
Chili
 
Thinking of selling a 1917 BSA Lee Enfield sporterized a long time ago. Monte Carlo stock and a 4x30 scope. It was registered as a Parker Hale if that means anything. Wood is in very good condition, blueing is good. What should I ask for this?

Thanks
Chili

You should ask for forgiveness for Bubba for doing such a thing to a nice rifle.

Without pictures, a description of barrel condition, and a bit better description, such as original or aftermarket stock, and/or forestock, checkering, factory or basement sporter, make and type of scope, mounting system, and other things, giving an opinion of a price is a useless exercise.

Most similar sporterized rifles go from $100 to $200 on the Equipment Exchange.
 
Well, you have SHOT IT!

What did you think?

Handle nice? 2 drops of oil and you have the fastest 4-motion bolt ever made, 10-round mag, decent trigger on most of them, others can be MADE nice.

Enough power? It will flatten anything in North America with very little trouble.

Doesn't it really deserve a place on YOUR rack?

Still, if you really wish to spurn the poor old thing's very best efforts to please you....... and trade her off for mere PLASTIC pictures of complete arseh*les such as Borden and and that Liberal liar Mackenzie King, have at it.

But you wont get a proper valuation without decent photos.

Gotta go. I have a revolt on my hands. My SMLEs are demanding that their unloved sister come HERE to be safe and loved and appreciated and fed with fresh Match-grade ammunition at 2250 ft/sec at the muzzle. Good thing I hid their bayonets!
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I want to get into Cowboy shooting and since I dont hunt or shoot rifles, I figured its time for this to go.
By the way it shot just fine for me anyway 2" group at a hundred yards

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thats a commercial sporter, not a bubba job. I believe that Parker Hale did them up much the same way Churchill did. nice rifle. depending on the buyer 250 to 350. 175 to 200 would move if quickly

PS id throw the scope away and shoot it with the very nice lyman peep
 
Looks like a Williams peep to me, and that alone is worth 35-50. Nice looking rifle, you should enquire on the hunting rifle sight/form as this milsurp lot is stuck in the Antique Road Show frame of mind. If you want to move it quick, remove peep sight, sling, scope, and ask $175plus.
 
i had one that shot very well (1MOA),the scope was gone with a stock that looked much older,I sold it back to a friend for $200.It was a great gun but my .270 just shot flatter out here in the prairies,although it fit me great.
 
I have a Parker Hale #4 and got a steal of a deal for $180. Parker Hale are top of the line and go well over $200. As said befor, this is NOT a Bubba
 
Personally I find the prices are higher at shows and face-to-face. Odds on getting a generous asking price selling it on the EE are not so good.
Too many other deals only a mouse click away.
At a show or a face-to-face buy, the potential buyer can ascertain that he's buying a better grade of gun.
Online...it's a bit of a gamble and the lower prices reflect this fact.
I've sold a professionally sportered LE for 300 $ and without even trying hard.
But online you won't get 300 $ I'm thinking
 
Put THESE photos in the ad, pop the ad into the EE just for a try.

Anyone looking at it should be able to SEE that this is no run-of-the-mill Bubba: THIS ONE is top-grade and built up by a top-grade Company.

A higher price is more than justified.... and it might get the rifle a bit of respect, too.

I just get SO tired of questions about "this old POS .303 I got".

They are pure simplicity..... and likely the single most efficient design EVER.
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It is a really nice commercial sporter, probably not worth getting rid of it, in my humble opinion! Unless it really never gets to see any shooting time.
 
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Well, not a "Bubba" for sure. A Parker-Hale factory sporter conversion, complete with a Parker-Hale scope mount.

Some people look down on sporterized Military rifles, but this was a way of life back in the 1900s. The same people who have lower opinions of .303 conversions go ga-ga over a Sedgley Springfield, but what is the difference? Husqvarna used the m/96 Mauser actions for their fine factory sporters, and many of the top name gunsmiths in Germany made their reputations converting 98 Mausers.

We have to look a bit at History on some of these converted rifles. In your case, England had just fought WWII, was almost broke because of it, and had a lot of unemployment. BUT, there were many thousands of surplus rifles available, and these were turned into a cash asset by doing a tasteful sporterizing of them, and selling them abroad.

These were not only sold by Gun Shops, but by the thousands by Eatons. Simpsons-Sears, and the alphabet soup Hardware store chains.

They were well made, and returning Veterans were familiar with them, so a moderate priced hunting rifle sold very well, especially when production of Commercial Winchesters and other brand name rifles was just getting back to speed, and prices on them were high. Not only that, there were Tons of .303 ammo available.

I would not take less than $250 for this rifle. The scope, while it might work, is 50 years technology out of date so for all purposes is worth very little. The receiver peep sight adds to the value a bit. The person who had this rifle wanted a HUNTING rifle, and had that peep sight put on for fast close range shots.

Personally, I would keep it. It is in very nice shape, and can serve as a good hunting rifle in the future. I would, however, replace the scope with a more modern one. With a good scope, you might even find it shoots better too.
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