-
Legacy Member
I must be so out of touch with prices... haven't bought or sold anything in a long time. $4,000 for a regular 1944
M1
? Yikes, seems nuts to me! I better revalue my collection.
Bob, this was my initial thought also. But then I see CMP
auctions like this. I know this is a Winchester and is 1943 but still, $16,000???
Civilian Marksmanship Program - Promoting firearms safety training!
If you remember we talked over email about the seller. You said you knew him well and that he knows his stuff.
-
-
08-14-2016 03:56 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Advisory Panel
Pie in the sky?
...Did you show it to Scott Duff, or are you fishing in the dark with him same as you are with us? ...
He's fishing. Note:
"I understand pictures helps but I have none at this time."
and
"I would post pictures if I had them but I don't."
from which one can deduce that ScottDuff hasn't seen anything, not even photos.
This thread is going nowhere without photos.
Last edited by Patrick Chadwick; 08-14-2016 at 05:34 PM.
-
-
-
Legacy Member
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
-
Contributing Member
Have to say that I see it differently... the guy asks a simple question: what's an original 1944 rifle worth? Is it worth the $4,000 the seller is asking? OK, that's a hard question without seeing it, but there are simple answers that might help him. Mine is NO, unless it is the best 1944 anybody has ever seen, just flat new. If it is a gun in high excellent condition and original, my guess is $2,500.
Real men measure once and cut.
-
-
Legacy Member
Have to say that I see it differently... the guy asks a simple question: what's an original 1944 rifle worth? Is it worth the $4,000 the seller is asking? OK, that's a hard question without seeing it, but there are simple answers that might help him. Mine is NO, unless it is the best 1944 anybody has ever seen, just flat new. If it is a gun in high excellent condition and original, my guess is $2,500.
Thank you guys. I will post pictures if and when I get them and then we can continue this conversation. Thanks for the help so far.
-
-
Legacy Member
There were tens of thousands of M-1 Garands sold after the war. The DCM has been unloading them for decades. I've seen the prices go from $100, to $300 when I got mine in the 90s. But I find it hard to believe why anyone would pay $4,000 for an ubiquitous service rifle made so abundantly. A sniper version of a USMC Johnson or something maybe. But a regular M-1? Nah....keep looking. I don't know those "experts" quoted and don't care. It sounds like those Mecum car auctions, with guys prancing around yelling "Ho!....'nother bid! YAOW! "
Don't get suckered in by emotions. There are so many M-1s out there it's not funny.
-
-
Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
AZshot
There were tens of thousands of M-1 Garands sold after the war. The DCM has been unloading them for decades. I've seen the prices go from $100, to $300 when I got mine in the 90s. But I find it hard to believe why anyone would pay $4,000 for an ubiquitous service rifle made so abundantly. A sniper version of a USMC Johnson or something maybe. But a regular M-1? Nah....keep looking. I don't know those "experts" quoted and don't care. It sounds like those Mecum car auctions, with guys prancing around yelling "Ho!....'nother bid! YAOW! "
Don't get suckered in by emotions. There are so many M-1s out there it's not funny.
Thanks for the advice, I am certainly trying to take my time to make sure I make a good decision. I understand there are a lot of M1s out there but from my understanding there are not may factory original M1s out there. Should not a original M1
be priced significantly higher then say a restored rifle? Thanks again for your opinion the subject.
-
-
Contributing Member
Original
That's very true... the first pair that was new unissued and in the factory box was auctioned by CMP
for over $30,000 -- and they were Korean Era late production. Subsequent pairs brought about $16,000 and individual rifles were bid into the $8,000 range. A similar 1944 rifle would be rarer, but of course the problem is determining if it really is a new gun or a near-perfect restoration. I could do one that would fool most people for a LOT less than $4,000.
Real men measure once and cut.
-
Thank You to Bob Seijas For This Useful Post:
-
Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
mdarnell19
Man you guys are tough on a new guy to the forum. Do you believe I am trying to do anything other then what I stated?
It's nothing to do with being a new guy. So please do not take it personally. "Tough" tends to have a negative flavor - I would prefer "rigorous". And the rigor is in the interest of your wallet!
You did the right thing in coming to this forum, as the collective eyeballs of forum users will often pick out aspects that a single person might overlook. But to make use of that collective experience, photos are of the essence.
And please beware of the word "original". The swapping out of parts to create what is presumed to be an original configuration for a particular date or number range is so easy that it is not possible to guarantee that a rifle is original (in the sense of being the same assembly of parts as left the factory) merely because the parts match the approved configuration. In this matter one must be rigorous - even tough - and inspect the rifle minutely for signs that parts have been retrofitted. This is often revealed by differences in wear, scratches, dirt etc. All aspects that require no particular knowledge of the type of rifle, but a sharp eye for material inconsistency.
So in the end, even with the best photos, no-one will be able to guarantee that the rifle is original. All we will be able to say is that (hopefully) nothing is visibly wrong. Considering that the price that the seller is looking for is 8 times the price of my 1943 original-enough-for-me Garand
, you certainly should be rigorous in evaluation - of the rifle and the seller!
At the price level that you are considering, one should a) have the rifle examined by an acknowledged expert and b) obtain a written guarantee from the seller that he will take back the rifle and return the money if the rifle is subsequently proven not to be as he claims. Remember the old saying: verbal claims are not worth the paper they're witten on!
-
Thank You to Patrick Chadwick For This Useful Post: