Wichester 94 commemorative VALUE ?????

Pre-1898

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I was offered a couple of winchester commemorative winchester model 94 in
30-30 caliber New in box, and would like to know how much they could worth.

would anyone know about their value?


Shrek...
 
y2k said:
which ones are they?
Yes Specific Models does make a diff.
I Sold a Boxed Minty Antlered Game Model 94 in 30-30......I got 600 bucks for it about 5 years ago which I thought was about right at the time.....
 
Have finally saw the guy, and the rifles. There are 3 of them. They are supposely new and unfired, but NOT in the box. from what I have seen, the gold receivers on two of them have tarnished a bit from handling and not wipping after. the third one as a silver receiver.

They are commemorative for
: Commanche
: Apache
: Spyke ( Railroad)

From what he told me he wants $700.00 each or $1700.00 for the three of the them.

They look good, but I personally believe they are overpriced.

What do you guys think????
 
scs said:
too much $$$ for me,$400 each would seem closer to the market price :)

Maybe $300-$350 each, especially with no boxes. They're just shooters anyway. If buddy thinks he'll get $700 each for them he's dreamin'. ;)

I like commemorative Winchester '94's but not the gawdy gold colored ones! :eek:
 
No boxes, no value. They are worth whatever you would pay for a used Winchester .30-30. The plating on these guns comes off very easily and some of the commemorative rifles were made up from spare parts and not especially hand fitted. They are usually safe to shoot but please have a gunsmith check out the headspace before you fire.

Scott
 
That's what I taught! a way overpriced. Thanks for your help guys. I guess I will follow my first taught, and look around for a good plain model 94 trapper carbine in .44 mag or .357 mag. Anyway No need for a .30-30.

Thanks again!
 
m39a2 said:
No boxes, no value. They are worth whatever you would pay for a used Winchester .30-30. The plating on these guns comes off very easily and some of the commemorative rifles were made up from spare parts and not especially hand fitted. They are usually safe to shoot but please have a gunsmith check out the headspace before you fire.

Scott

Got a reference? First I've heard of this concern.
 
Joe, no ref, just personal experience. Have worked on several of the comm guns made in the late 70's and early 80's and several were, what I consider to be loose actions and right on the verge of being out of headspace. They actually seemed to be rifles having fired thousands of rounds not "New in box" as they should be. They were new but I think they were "Made up" of spare parts rather then the ones made say before the 1970 which were really hand fitted.
Scott
 
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