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#1 |
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: US
Posts: 3,843
Thanks: 132
Thanked 729 Times in 438 Posts
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I cannot remember exactly how many nice M1930s having passed through me these years, probably a dozen. After selling all my occasionally shootable pistols, life is boring. So I decided to buy one back. Of course, the candidate pistol did not have to be a M1930, postwar Bolo was OK as well -- those post WWI Mausers were built in best steel. Both were available. But there was another collector desperately needing a Bolo, so he took the Bolo away. I ended up with this M1930, not bad either.
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#2 |
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Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Somewhere in Northern Italy
Posts: 2,646
Thanks: 1,087
Thanked 1,783 Times in 1,007 Posts
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alvin
Quite a nice broomhandle! I've got one M1930 but now I'm thinking about selling/trading it for a 1911 ... ![]()
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"Originality can't be restored and should be at the top of any collector's priority list. |
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#3 |
User
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: US
Posts: 3,843
Thanks: 132
Thanked 729 Times in 438 Posts
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This one has lost a little bit blue under the barrel and rails. It has a correct stock and excellent bore. Back in 1992, a M1930 like this with stock in this shape cost about $2000, if count 3% year over year inflation, that's roughly $4000 in today's USD. But looks like this "inflation rule" only applies to top ones in today's market (I sold a few top ones). This one does not run there. Not dirt cheap, but it's still on cheap side.
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