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ITHACA 12G 20" 2 3/4" , D.S. POICE SPECIAL -ENGRAVED FEATHER LIGHT, MATTE BLACK NON REFLECTIVE



WINCHESTER 12-G 25" 2/3/4" MODEL 1911 S.L. -STAINLESS -FULL CHARGE



LLAMA, 380 SEMI AUTO 4" CHECKERED GRIPS , COPY OF BROWNING .45

2007-02-11 12:27:50 · 8 answers · asked by DeeDee 1 in Sports Outdoor Recreation Hunting

8 answers

I agree with the 1st and 3rd response. Becareful about selling the pistol yourself because so much paperwork is required including a pistol purchase permit or other documentation (varies by state) stating the buyer is approved to purchase. If you want to sell the pistol, you might talk with a gun dealer or gun shop.

I would suggest you hold on to them even if you don't shoot. It would be nice to have a pistol and shotgun for home protection and you might have a loved one who likes to shoot one day and would appreciate the guns.

You might check out www.gunbroker.com to see what similar items are selling for.

2007-02-12 01:10:35 · answer #1 · answered by The Big Shot 6 · 0 0

The first answer is correct, and the second guy has no idea what he is talking about. Ithaca was a highly respected firm who's shotguns were good enough for the U.S. Military and hundreds if not thousands of police departments, embassy guards and sportsmen. Illama handguns sold very well in the United States and earned a well deserved good reputation. Illama sold here from the 1950's until the demise of the company in 2005. They were recently featured in a long and information filled farewell article in Shotgun News. You have three very solid firearms there all of which will hold their value.

2007-02-12 00:52:24 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The Ithaca, and Winchester have value. The Llama is a low end brazilian knock-off import. You can go to a dealer, or gunsmith to have them apprasied. Or check out gun broker.com But first if you live in a good sized town/city go to your library and use there refernce books. Look for GUNGUIDE 2007, BLUE BOOK of GUN VALUES 2007. You can get a price range for each of the weapons rangeing from NIB (New in box) down to about 30% shape. that way when you do go and get them inspected you'll be armed with up to date priceing.

2007-02-12 14:19:21 · answer #3 · answered by Rebelpvtj 2 · 0 0

I would put them in their cases and bring them to two or three gun stores or pawn shops and ask them to do an appraisal and then go from there. I wouldn't settle for less than $700 on all three if you do sell them. The Llama without seing it is worth about $370.

2007-02-11 20:35:20 · answer #4 · answered by Mark T 6 · 1 0

Get appraisals done at a couple of gun shops but NOT pawn shops also you can look on gunbroker.com to get an idea of what they are selling for it is the ebay of the gun world

2007-02-12 08:40:11 · answer #5 · answered by george a 3 · 0 0

none of them are collector pieces so their value is as shooters. $200 to $400 each depending on your area and time of the year

2007-02-12 10:56:01 · answer #6 · answered by glen t 4 · 0 0

Go to www.gunbroker.com and do a search and compare. There are several other sites. auctionarms.com gunsamerica. just compare.

2007-02-12 10:11:20 · answer #7 · answered by kingquad22 1 · 0 0

The winchester is the only thing worth anything...the ithaca and especially the llama are cheap knockoffs that are unreliable and are worth more as scrap.

2007-02-11 20:36:55 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 4

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