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07-19-2017, 01:48 AM | #41 |
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OK, I read through almost all of this and it's very obvious that Kyrie has strong opinions on the subject. That he looks at it as anything except original manufacture is a fake?? To me that's too extreme. However I was mentored by Bill Munis, who liked originality, and his reasoning was that if you found a piece that was numbered in that time period, that it would be logical to use it, if needed. Armors or depots would take a new part and number it, but an armorer could very well have simply used another part whether correctly numbered or not, the purpose was to get a gun working.
I do not agree with the reasoning that finding a numbered, period part is fakery. In many collecting fields it is acceptable to refinish. Such as, Cars, US military parts if it looks correct will be placed to make a " correct" Garand... Don't take me wrong, I like originality and strive for complexity original lugers. |
07-19-2017, 10:30 AM | #42 | |||
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On the other end of the collector scale, I favor the Lugers that have been repaired and returned to service, by qualified armorers or original repair facilities. These would include post-WW I rebuilds, WW II rebuilds, and RC/VoPo rebuilds. I especially favor the rebuilds done after WW II to return Lugers to service long after their 'planned obsolescence'. Matching numbers mean little to me; functionality is dominant. And provenance is more important than 100% originality, to me at least. I would rather have a worn, rebuilt Luger with proven history than an unused barracks queen with little or no wear. I'm a romantic.
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07-19-2017, 06:15 PM | #43 |
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My opinion, and it is only that, so it means little in the long run except to me....is that I'm kinda middle of the road on this subject. I've had the opportunity to be educated/mentored over the years by an advanced "collector" who lives near to me. Recently, I have turned my attention to aquiring a few lugers, primarily Mauser WW2 guns. Most of what I have bought has been "matching" except for the magazines, and I have had to acquire holsters separately. One of the Lugers, an S/42 1939 date, has a mismatched firing pin, this doesn't really "bother" me, but I am not averse to obtaining one with a "matching" number. I don't feel this is "dishonest" in any way, and will not affect the "originality" of the gun any more than the mismatched part that is in it. If, and when, I sell off that particular gun, I'll let the buyer know what I've done. But that, in the end, is just how I do things. I do try to be aware of my surroundings when I buy expensive guns, and perform my due diligence. In the end, "Caveat Emptor".
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07-19-2017, 08:09 PM | #44 |
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Gun collecting has a loop that is hard to jump out. First, let's talk about expensive guns a little bit. High-end guns are expensive, but be honest, financially, many people could still afford one or two of those even at today's price. Some people could afford more. These things are priced as like new car, expensive, but not impossible.
But there is a significant difference between acquiring an expensive C&R and a new car. Buy a new car, there is not much trick, you do a little bit research on different models, put down the money, that's it. But C&R? No. Players need to go through many guns to build up a sense on those things. That's one reason many collectors dare not to play expensive C&Rs. So, this is not an easy field to play. Before you dump money in, you need to know them. But you won't know them until you have many of them passed though you. Chicken and egg, which comes first... The traditional answer is "read books". Start from there, that's a starting point. |
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