SVT 40 value?

timandkimandshea

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Hi, I have two of these rifles, and I was wondering if one was more collectable, and an approximate value on each. Both are un-molested, no cracks or issues that I am aware of. I have fired neither.
One is a1941 Tula 4 port, the second is a 1940 Izhevsk 6 port.
Thank you for your input
T
 
The prices on them has gone silly IMHO... North of $500 & usually around $700 in the EE.

I just don't understand it.

Cheers
Jay
 
Supply and demand baby.

Microeconomic theory has taken a beating now that the interweb can give anyone a price range and attention always goes to the best or worst number. Social psychology is also telling us that people are more greedy than what is good for the next man.
 
I know what they are generally going for on the EE, I will be selling one to help pay for an anniversary band, 25 years of wedded bliss. Just not sure which to keep.
 
I know what they are generally going for on the EE, I will be selling one to help pay for an anniversary band, 25 years of wedded bliss. Just not sure which to keep.

Keep the one that is in better condition if you are a collector. If you are a shooter, take them both to the range, print some groups & let that be the deciding factor.

I like the SVT40, just can't believe the prices that milsurps are now commanding.

Cheers
Jay
 
I think we are heading into a new age of increasing cost on everything..
Have a look at your household expenses ..darn my house insurance went up 20+% this year
More seasonal floods and forest fires
We can only quess what costs will be in 10 years???
OOps. end of thread hijack
 
The pricing has sure changed from a few years ago !
Yes the svt has gone nuts-
anything Keltec has gone up
M305 "even the older better ones" have gone Down
Norinco T97 has gone Down
Jungle 303 Carbine have gone Down
Tons of "VZ & CZ "varients" rifles on the market
Tons of shotguns at good prices

Boy the market changes !

OH... I like this " My nickel of nonsense... (Seeing as how we don't have pennies any more...)
 
Weren't they selling at Crappy Tire for under $300 a few years ago(2013)???
Now a days if you see one for under $700 you're thinking must be something wrong with it...
I seen one still packed in cosmoline going for $900. Hmmm.
 
Keep the one that is in better condition if you are a collector. If you are a shooter, take them both to the range, print some groups & let that be the deciding factor.

I like the SVT40, just can't believe the prices that milsurps are now commanding.

Cheers
Jay

Like Jay says, keep the one that shoots better, which may be the one with the better bore. I've owned many of these refurbs and what is truly rare is one with an excellent, unused looking bore. Also rare (but they do exist), is one that will shoot 1.5-2" groups right out of the box with surplus ammo- find one like that and it's a keeper. Other than functionality there's not really that much to distinguish one refurb from another. They have virtually no original parts on them (talking the Soviet refurbs, not the Bulgarian version).

As far as price is concerned, it amazes me how some seem to think that they should still be priced at the levels they were offered at when they were dumped in the market a few years ago. $600 to $700 IS the current price range in the private market and, as someone pointed out, commercial sellers seem to get much more for them. I'm going to sell a couple at the Spring show here in a couple of months and I can already hear the moaning about the prices being crazy high. I would urge potential SVT buyers to focus on the mechanical condition of the rifles and not make price the key issue.

milsurpo
 
Like Jay says, keep the one that shoots better, which may be the one with the better bore. I've owned many of these refurbs and what is truly rare is one with an excellent, unused looking bore. Also rare (but they do exist), is one that will shoot 1.5-2" groups right out of the box with surplus ammo- find one like that and it's a keeper. Other than functionality there's not really that much to distinguish one refurb from another. They have virtually no original parts on them (talking the Soviet refurbs, not the Bulgarian version).

As far as price is concerned, it amazes me how some seem to think that they should still be priced at the levels they were offered at when they were dumped in the market a few years ago. $600 to $700 IS the current price range in the private market and, as someone pointed out, commercial sellers seem to get much more for them. I'm going to sell a couple at the Spring show here in a couple of months and I can already hear the moaning about the prices being crazy high. I would urge potential SVT buyers to focus on the mechanical condition of the rifles and not make price the key issue.

milsurpo

Personally I like the 6 port version better than the 4 port which was a manufacturing decision to speed up the production of these crazy loud guns. 100% agree that the price point is now 600 to 700 on the private market. Dealers always sell for more because they need to make a profit. Moving forward, unless a bunch more guns are found in a depot somewhere, the price will continue to climb. At least the SVT 40 has a cool story - not like an AG42B ($700 to $900) which is a curiosity with extremely limited wartime use (like none except maybe a pissed off swede launching a shot at his neighbor). The Hakim is my equal to an SVT 40 and deserves the price it fetches. I think the SVT deserves the money a Hakim brings. Finding a Rashid would be even better.
I don't shoot mine much anymore because it's hard to take apart for cleaning but I do take it out on my milsurp range days and set up next to the most annoying guy on the range. Usually that person packs up after I run a couple of magazines.
 
Personally I like the 6 port version better than the 4 port which was a manufacturing decision to speed up the production of these crazy loud guns. .

Yeah, me too. Very effective brake. According to the Chumak book on SVT's, the switch to the 4 port was made to intentionally reduce the impact of shooting on the comrade's beside you in the trench! If you're at just the wrong place next to one it does make your teeth vibrate. Unfortunately the effectiveness in reducing felt recoil dropped dramatically.

milsurpo
 
You can all keep complaining but mark my worlds... they will be a $1500 gun within a few years.

They didn’t make that many all things considered. Better than an M1 Garand imo as well.
 
I would keep the Izhevsk one. They made less SVTs than Tula/Mednogorsk (Tokarev worked in Tula). Also AFAIK the 6 port muzzle break is period-correct for an SVT of that vintage.
 
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