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It has been reconditioned. nice shape.

2007-03-04 07:20:06 · 1 answers · asked by Deanna 1 in Sports Outdoor Recreation Hunting

1 answers

Well, if your Winchester was manufactured August 21, 1894 it can't be an original .30 WCF because the .30 Winchester Center Fire cartridge was not introduced until 1895.

It is hard to appraise a value on a firearm without seeing it. What do you mean by reconditioned? If only the stock and forearm have been redone, that is not necessarily detrimental to its value. If it has been re-barreled (to .30 WCF) or re-blued, that will diminish the value. Assuming that it is a .30 WCF and a Model 1894 of later manufacture and only the wood has been redone, that could be as high as $400 to $600. Of course, with Winchester closing its doors your Winchester could command a higher price. If it has been re-blued or re-barreled it could be as low as $250.

Why don't you just keep it? Sounds like a nice gun.

H

2007-03-04 10:06:19 · answer #1 · answered by H 7 · 2 0

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