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There has been quite a shift in the "Historical" values of objects in the last 50 years or so. The SKS and Mosin Nagants today are the Enfields, Mausers, Springfields and the otheres that were available by the barrel full after WWII and into the mid-60s. We still have a similar situation, as the Russian stuff has become available after the "Cold War" and collapse of the Russian Communist Empire.
These guns were plentiful, and could be sold for good hard cash after WWII. Sound familiar with the Mosins and SKS rifles today?
SMELLIE dug through barrels of them at Lever in Vancouver, and found some really rare ones. I dug through barrels and racks of SMLE rifles and still have some Commercial BSA SMLE rifles and others. I paid $9.95 each, and took my pick of them.
And those neat little Australian .310 Martini Cadet rifles at $9.95. No ammo available, but you could chamber and fire a .32 S&W pistol cartridge in them. Blew out the case a bit, but who cared at $1.59 a box? Many of them were converted by Elwood Epps in Clinton, Ontario, to fire 30-30, 32 Winchester Special, .357 Magnum, and even .44 Magnum cartridges, making these handy little rifles useful. And I don't think anyone would consider old Elwood as a "Bubba."
And today we have people buying the Mosins and SKS rifles, and hanging all kinds of "Tactical" goodies on them. No matter what we think, not all of the people who buy these rifles are concerned with preserving the originilaty of them, and what is a treasure to us is merely a starting point for someone to make his "dream rifle."
But some of the stories make you want to cry. In the early 1990s at an Edmonton Gun Show, a guy came by and saw some Lee Enfieldsl on my table. He mentioned that he had one at home, and he had cut it down for hunting, but it was not as accurate as before. Then he asked if they all had Cork inside the wood in the barrel area. I asked him if it has something like "Regulated By --------" stamped on it. He said, "Yes, Regulated by Fulton. What does that mean?"
I told him it means that he took a $600 very accurate target rifle and made a $35 Sporter out of it.
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