Value of a '67 Winchester

I was about to say $100 for a Winchester 67.
I've seen Winchester 94 Canadian Centennials go for between $350 and $500.
I've often thought about buying that rifle with that nice long octagon barrel but I gather that 94's for the first few years after 64 can be unreliable.
 
Winchester '67

A friend of mine has collected every Winchester commerative rifle that was ever made , starting in '67 with the Buffalo Bill ( carbine $ rifle ) for some reason , idon't know why they never went up in value very much ? they are good looker's , and i understand from some people who use them for hunting and at the range there alright. He got every one the whole series to date , but try and sell one , it's tough , i've seen guys at the gun shows go for a plain model 94 , and for just a little more they could have a commerative piece , and they just won't spend the extra money. good luck Joe
 
First off forget the blue book value, and go out tomorrow and try to buy one...after a week or so reflect on your difficulty in this matter, and adjust your price accordingly. :D

Personally I'd hang onto it. :)
 
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here are the pics ...
 
Canadian Centennial 30-30s came in carbine and 26 inch barrel lentghs.

Pretty safe to say, considering demand, that the longer barrel variants bring slightly more cash.....
Oops, now I see.......paid 425 or so for mine in similar condition as molles....
 
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A carbine and a rifle sold at Switzer's auction last weekend for $375 each. That's what the standard carbines were bringing. i.e. no premium for the commemoratives.
 
Please reduce the size of your pictures. A dial up poster will be loading this page until next Tuesday.
"...why they never went up in value very much..." Too many made and there's nothing special about them other than the name on them. They're only of interest to the few who collect them if they're still sealed in the box.
 
If I remember correctly, there were something in the neighbourhood of 90,000 26 inch barrelled rifles made along with 9,000 20 inch barrelled carbines for the Canadian Centennial version. I'd have to say that the carbine would be worth more than the rifle just from those numbers, but then other market forces would also have an effect on price.
 
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