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10-10-2012 10:39 AM
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Fantastic................. That makes every still sealed and wrapped one even rarer. You mark my words Sam. In a years time you'll be absolutely kicking yourself at the very idea of unwrapping a brand new, in the original Ordnance wrapper, unused, unfired Lee Enfield. Now, instead of being all those irreplaceable features all wrapped up in one package that can never be replicated, it's just another bog standard No4 Mk2 of which there are probably 50,000 or so sloshing around the market place.
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Fantastic................. That makes every still sealed and wrapped one even rarer. You mark my words Sam. In a years time you'll be absolutely kicking yourself at the very idea of unwrapping a brand new, in the original Ordnance wrapper, unused, unfired Lee Enfield. Now, instead of being all those irreplaceable features all wrapped up in one package that can never be replicated, it's just another bog standard No4 Mk2 of which there are probably 50,000 or so sloshing around the market place.
I know sir and those very thoughts went through my mind before I decided to make the purchase. But greedy me I wanted to shoot a brand new Lee Enfield, hold it, look at it and care for it. BTW thank you for your posts, thanks for sharing your training and experiences.
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You could, of course, use the wrapping paper to wrap a piece of wood and just TELL people that there´s a No 2 inside (I´ve got a Mauser K98k sniper and several other rare weapons, all wrapped up and even I sometimes believe that they´re all in there.)
Last edited by villiers; 10-10-2012 at 04:57 PM.
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Yup I have one that came out of the wrap-- the coolest part was pushing a patch thru the bore from the chamber and watching the gfreasy material squeeze out the muzzle like squeezing a tube of toothpaste I am not sure if it was softened cosmolene it did look like cosmolene but also like brownish golden gease.
But I have never shot it.[IMG][/IMG]
It is the closest rifle a No4 Mk2
Regards
TerryinVictoria
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Originally Posted by
sam54
I know sir and those very thoughts went through my mind before I decided to make the purchase. But greedy me I wanted to shoot a brand new Lee Enfield, hold it, look at it and care for it. BTW thank you for your posts, thanks for sharing your training and experiences.
Keep up the good work.
I'll buy yours in 2 years for $400 and shoot it, while mine stays comfortably in it's wrap and continues to increase exponentially in value...
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I would like to find myself with the same problem. I undersand the value entrinsic and otherwise to a wrapped Enfiled but they are such works of mecanical art to leave under cover. I think it would be a tough decision to make (wrap/unwrap/unwrap & shoot.)
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You can shoot almost a million of them HoH. Take it from me, shooting one is much the same as shooting another. So why open the one that you've got when you KNOW that it'll shoot just like any of the others million? Just my 2c's worth!
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"I'll buy yours in 2 years for $400 and shoot it,"
Not anywhere I've been lately. More like $600-800. At the last Reno show a guy had one in the wrap for $1400, no takers.
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Originally Posted by
Charlie
"I'll buy yours in 2 years for $400 and shoot it,"
Not anywhere I've been lately. More like $600-800. At the last Reno show a guy had one in the wrap for $1400, no takers.
In the past 12 months, I purchased two out of the wrap No4 Mk2's in excellent condition (and I mean excellent condition) for $250 each. I have also seen several wrapped rifles in the $800 range. No tough decisions on my end, mine will remain wrapped and I will shoot one of the others in my collection.
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