A place to talk about Milsurp Prohibs that need to find a home!

ArmedGinger

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Dealing with an estate that includes MG42, Ma Duece, BREN, Thompsons, MP40, etc.

Hate seeing history get welded up :(

Please save them :p
 
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Criminal, we used to be able to shoot FA until PET put a stop to it in 1968 and these gun bans continues under JT, boy we sure are a lot safer now !!! BS.
 
totally sad, add deactivation is solid no moving parts today, last Thompson I saw the fellow in his 70s was selling all parts less upper receiver, he got more than he would deactivated, might be another option
 
yeah under the current made up imaginary deactivation standard I think a cut receiver and a parts kit may actually be less of a travesty
 
Certainly very unfortunate , but at least the family will get some cash out of them , and deactivation is still better than having them melted down in a smelter which is probably what would happen if Trudeau's boys got hold of them . Fingers crossed that there is a change of government before Trudeau's OIC gun grab and seizure happens , or a lot of good ARs will be meeting the same fate . :bangHead::bangHead::bangHead:
 
Send them to Wolverine Supplies! They do a much better job of deactivation.

Agreed, I bought a deactivated BD 38 from them, with papers, action still cycles, magazine is removable, barrel of course is plugged and bolt face is shaved off.
Also trigger moves but it feels like there are no parts left in the trigger group.
But absolutely no welds on the outside, beautiful job !
 
I think the sadness at seeing guns deactivated is a bit disingenious - they can still be sold live (to a business or a foreign collector) but in this market where they bring more dead it's on the people who are sending them to be deactivated.

About the only interest we had in selling them "live" was to another company who wanted them just to deactivate them. So we might as well just do that ourselves.
 
About the only interest we had in selling them "live" was to another company who wanted them just to deactivate them. So we might as well just do that ourselves.

As in 'no one expressed interest except deactivators'? Could have asked here - I know several european collectors that buy from Switzer's and similar - I'm always happy to give out their contact info or most auctions have no problem referring to foreign buyers for a direct sale.

Or 'no interest in selling to anyone except to a company that would deactivate"?
 
As in 'no one expressed interest except deactivators'? Could have asked here - I know several european collectors that buy from Switzer's and similar - I'm always happy to give out their contact info or most auctions have no problem referring to foreign buyers for a direct sale.

Or 'no interest in selling to anyone except to a company that would deactivate"?

Well they aren't all welded yet. We've only deactivated a couple of the Thompsons so far for people who wanted them.
 
Which museum do you think wants prohibs??

If you have some you'd donate I'll PM you the contact info ;) Any business/shop/gunsmith can have a display set up if they are licensed for that class - business licenses are called business/museum for a reason...
 
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At the end of the day, those firearms (and their intrinsic value) belong to the inheritors of that estate and it is entirely their call as to what happens to them. We can sit here and moan about live guns being deactivated until the cows come home, but unless somebody is willing to pony up the cash equivalent to their deactivated value, it is all moot. The sad truth is those guns are worth more dead than alive solely because of our ideologically-driven government's civilian disarmament agenda. It is not the estate's fault any more than it is an auctioneer's. The inheritors of that estate are understandably interested in obtaining top dollar for that collection, and the easiest route to that end-state is deactivation within the current anti-firearms political climate. It only makes sense. The preservation of history is all well and good until it costs real dollars out of someone's pocket, then the altruistic urges usually lose out to fiscal reality.

My collection is another one that is worth "more dead than alive" due to the high number of recent and "classic" prohibs within it. I can tell you that those firearms each cost my family dearly, and my estate won't be donating many (if any) to a museum for a tax write-off worth pennies on the dollar. In all likelihood they will instead dbe chopped and/or welded to order as they are sold off -- either as de-registered parts kits or deactivated display pieces. Like others, my estate will be interested in the firearms primarily as a commodity to be sold for the highest possible dollar. The collection was important to me, but when I am dead and gone? All bets are off. My son and daughter may each elect to keep a few "sentimental" firearms from the limited selection that they is permitted to own, but the prohibs will go the way of the Dodo bird. Want someone to blame? Blame the government or making deactivation the only financially lucrative future for prohibited firearms in this country. Auctions are too risky a proposition, notwithstanding the current high priices being realized through Switzers, Landsborough, Wards and others. Deactivation is the far more predictable route to liberating finances that are tied up in a prohib firearms collection.

It sucks, but there it is. Expect to see more and more newly-deactivated prohibs on the market as the last generation of "classic" 1990s OIC owners dies off in the coming decade or two. Barring a change in government and a dramatic shift in the course of national firearms legislation in this country, the prohibs are doomed.. Better an inert, deactivated discussion piece than a smelter-recycled future as razor blades or some such.
 
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