If you guys think milsurp prices will recede, think again. Unless another big wave of gun control devalues all guns in Canada, it ain't going to happen.
With the new UN restrictions coming into force in December, get ready for alot LESS stuff to find its way here. Know what that means? Demand will remain, but availability will diminish = price hike on all milsurps.
I bought my first M1 for $125 private sale, an all-correct 1.49Mil SA in great shape. My second M1 was $149 at LeBaron, a Danish mixmaster. I bought several more danes ranging from a $199 shooter to $800 for a mint in the paper Breda, mostly from Districorp.
My last M1 was a $600 (after a few worn parts were replaced) 1.98mil SA, again in great shape.
Retail is currently in the $600-800 range or the guns at P&S and Milarm. Don't expect that to change. The guns ARE steadily selling at that price - I wouldn't hold my breath waiting for prices to come down.
And the prices didn't just "bump" to their current levels. There was a very lear ramp up in price that I bought into at several points. No surprises here...
Finally, the SA,Inc. rifles being sold for about $2000 are NOT military guns. They are new production by SA, Inc. Which is NOT the government "springfield armory" that closed in the 1960's. It is a commercial venture that only shares the same name, incorporated much later. They aren't in the same town, nor same facility and they share no continuity - not even staff.
Original guns were forged and milled out of billet. The new guns are made of investment cast receivers that have been known to deviate somewhat from military dimensional specifications. The parts used to assemble them (aside from receiver and barrel) are just used military parts from demilled rifles bought at scrap in the US, Korea, etc. that have been bead blasted and reparkerized. Sometimes they are even significantly worn rattle-traps put out on cheaply cast receivers with the cheapest grade of commercially produced barrel available to the manufacturer that week.
If you want an M1, get a real one - not a copy.