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Legacy Member
I bought it on usedguns. WW2 dated unused barrels have been selling for up to $450 lately.
Sorry tbone, I meant to ask, if I advertised a new barrel for 500 would it sell? I don't think it would. It would be interesting to know how much it would cost the factory to manufacture these.
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03-06-2014 05:19 PM
# ADS
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Legacy Member
I bet you don't have one of these...
I bet you won't either if you do not keep a close watch. Funny how a seemingly simple rifle componet can be so interesting. Very nice!
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Originally Posted by
Homer
Sorry tbone, I meant to ask, if I advertised a new barrel for 500 would it sell? I don't think it would. It would be interesting to know how much it would cost the factory to manufacture these.
I disagree, I think new manufactured No1 barrels would sell for more than $500 each if complete, finished and ready to fit. Maybe we'll see...
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Originally Posted by
Thunderbox
Would be interesting what the numbers and costs were at the time. I guess most of us now think that any factory run of No1/No4 barrels would be economically viable. If shooters are willing to pay Lothar Walther prices for No4 barrels, then a factory run has to be viable.
TB, To be fair to Walther the No4 barrels are not stocked items and I would guess someone sent them a drawing or original barrel to copy from, the barrel blank is not a bad price to the trade, even the charge for the profile is peanuts, the major cost is the chamber which is not far off the price of the blank.
Going off an old price list to get a one off made is around £300 + to the trade, if you take the chamber and thread out the equation and opt for a profiled blank around £180+, it costs me more in oil running my lathe than it costs them to do a profile, cutting a chamber and thread is an easy process, so costs can be reduced the other thing is the chance of a off the shelf one to fit (or to fit properly) is very slim, am sure Peter will mention that he had a bucket full to choose from when changing a barrel.
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Legacy Member
I disagree, I think new manufactured No1 barrels would sell for more than $500 each if complete, finished and ready to fit. Maybe we'll see...
With sights fitted mate is a different story and maybe a newly manufactured barrel might be more appealing. I advertised an as new parkerised barrel, dated 1950, no sights and still sealed in plastic for 450 and only got one call in many weeks. The fact is at the moment you can still buy rifles with perfect bores for 700 bucks and I suspect the factory would want upward of 700, especially if it were fitted up with sights. The sights would make it a fairly detailed and costly manufacturing process. Alternatively, buying one without sights would be a costly exercise for the consumer to then have them fitted. I'm not sure the demand would match up to the cost and maybe the factory figured this out already.
I'd love to know more.
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Advisory Panel
Originally Posted by
Homer
With sights fitted mate is a different story and maybe a newly manufactured barrel might be more appealing. I advertised an as new parkerised barrel, dated 1950, no sights and still sealed in plastic for 450 and only got one call in many weeks. The fact is at the moment you can still buy rifles with perfect bores for 700 bucks and I suspect the factory would want upward of 700, especially if it were fitted up with sights. The sights would make it a fairly detailed and costly manufacturing process. Alternatively, buying one without sights would be a costly exercise for the consumer to then have them fitted. I'm not sure the demand would match up to the cost and maybe the factory figured this out already.
I'd love to know more.
So many nails hit on the head in so few lines.....
hey, Homer... wonder if anyone could post the knox form pic over on flat earth... could cause someone to blow a heartlidge!
(I know... evil evil evil evil evil evil me )
Last edited by Son; 03-06-2014 at 11:20 PM.
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Legacy Member
The knox form markings raise a point - is it legally necessary to proof fire a barrel in Australia?
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Advisory Panel
Interesting. They didn't get as far as machining the 'flat' for the foresight block then?
“There are invisible rulers who control the destinies of millions. It is not generally realized to what extent the words and actions of our most influential public men are dictated by shrewd persons operating behind the scenes.”
Edward Bernays, 1928
Much changes, much remains the same.
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Originally Posted by
Maxwell Smart
The knox form markings raise a point - is it legally necessary to proof fire a barrel in
Australia?
No requirement for proof.
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