take down or solid? #4?
ok a good question to ask buddy..lmfao...
only info i was giving was
32 rolling block remington single shot, with a octogon barrel. Its a rim fire
I know nothing about these kinda firearms ..
I personally would only be interested in the solid models.
A ton of those #4's were made in the 1900's. It may not be antique unless it's a very low serial number. Average condition brings 150-300 around here.
I don't think .32 caliber will make antique status regardless of age.
Rifles:
•manufactured before 1898 that can discharge only rim-fire cartridges, other than 22 Calibre Short, 22 Calibre Long or 22 Calibre Long Rifle cartridges;
•manufactured before 1898 that can discharge centre-fire cartridges (whether with a smooth or rifled bore), have a bore diameter of 8.3 mm or greater, measured from land to land in the case of a rifled bore, with the exception of a repeating firearm fed by any type of cartridge magazine
Stock looks refinished on it (too glossy at the back). The rifle appears to be a commercial model (maybe even some sort of a copy?), so I doubt it's very collectible. If it's not collectible and given the fact that the ammo is nearly impossible to come by (except for 32RF adapters, which happen to be pretty unreliable and require some specialized components), the gun is not of much use to anyone, whether they're a shooter or collector or hunter. It's basically a conversation piece nowadays. 32RF is also a very underpowered low-velocity black powder round, so the rifle in question is probably only good for squirrels and other small rodents. Definitely not a medium / large game gun.
If I were you, I'd offer him $125 for it in all fairness. That way you can probably sell it later on without taking much of a hit or maybe break even. It's only "hope" is that it might make a good project gun, if it can be sleeved by a gunsmith to something like .22 WMR (and safely withstand the added pressure, which is a big question mark).
So, that's my 0.02... take it for what it's worth, lol. There's a reason why centerfire antiques are 3x or 4x the price of rimfire variants.
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. It's only "hope" is that it might make a good project gun, if it can be sleeved by a gunsmith to something like .22 WMR (and safely withstand the added pressure, which is a big question mark).
I think sleeving to 22 mag would be a foolish alteration; the #4 rolling block is a fairly weak action because there is very little metal ahead of the pivot hole in the breach block. They are only suitable for sleeving to 22 long rifle.
cheers mooncoon