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Contributing Member
Your most expensive firearms book?
I have a lot more experience than expertise, still have both eyes and most of my fingers though.

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07-01-2020 08:31 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
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Legacy Member
Clawsons 1911 book $500.
Hitler's Garands $350.
Palokangus Finnish
Arms Volume 1-3 $600.
Karbiner 98k Volume 1-3 (4 books) not sure on price but Volume 3 I've seen as high as $300 and Volume II which is 2 books was nearly $200 to start IIRC.
Biggest increase in value percentage wise Branko's Yugo
Mausers paperback book. Paid $15 seen them selling for $200.
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Advisory Panel
I've always been fortunate when purchasing my hardcover books, never had to pay more than about $100CDN. The exception was when I bought a collection and netted several for $300CDN...Lee Enfield Story, Webley, Springfield by Brophy, a few others that escape me plus a few not so important pubs. It was a good catch.
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Contributing Member

Originally Posted by
capt14k
Palokangus Finnishicon Arms Volume 1-3 $60
I'd love to have that one. If I could read Finnish
.
I have a lot more experience than expertise, still have both eyes and most of my fingers though.

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Advisory Panel
Save your money with Bady's book. It is full of errors.
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Contributing Member
1st Ed The Broad Arrow (MkI) limited Ed H/C No.211/300 signed by Ian listed on his site $1,500.oo/AUD
I have lots of 1st Ed WWI Australian
army (AIF) H/C books that range in the $4-600 AUD/Ea and some titles from WWII that are around the $3-400 range I mean I have chugged along collecting WW books for 44 years so its not really a flash in the pan effort.
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Atticus Thraxx
I'd love to have that one. If I could read
Finnish
.

Each chapter has an English Summary
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Thank You to capt14k For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member
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Legacy Member
My best (and most expensive) purchase so far is a set of Chinn "The Machine Gun", with all four volumes and the declassification letter..! Cost me £200 last year at the Trafalgar meeting at Bisley, which I thought was a bargain!
For those of you who do not know this magnum opus, it was written by George Chinn for the US Bureau of Ordnance in 1951, and is THE book on machine guns and cannon. Many of the illustrations, which are superb, have been reproduced many times in later publications...
Copies are on the internet, but nothing smells like the original!
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