You actually paid $1,143.14 for that Combat Commander. You have to adjust for inflation.
NO COMPARISON..........He didn't buy it today.........He bought it long ago........Doesn't count
You actually paid $1,143.14 for that Combat Commander. You have to adjust for inflation.
In 1956, after reviewing the new Python, Elmer Keith said he didn't think anyone would ever spend a weeks wages on a pistol.
I have never spent a week's wages on a pistol. I think the most I every spent was on the new Ruger 1911. I have a Series 70 Gold Cup, but I bought it used for $325.
It was interesting to watch the Rock Island Auction over the last three days. All kinds of firearms sold for tremendous sums of money. Go look at the results and prepare yourself for sticker shock. There were individual guns selling for the price of houses.
Guess it all depends what one thinks __________( fill in the blank) is worth to them. Personally I Never spend $$$ on high end anything. For shooting Iv’e seen WAY More people with expensive guns that can not shoot them any better than ones half their price. Many think a high priced gun makes them a better shot.
Correct, but to be honest though, a lot of that is just range day bragging rights with branding.
After state retirement, I worked county with a female deputy that had to qualify with her off duty gun right next to me. Her husband, ( a Lieutenant), had bought her a beautiful FN Browning High Power....It was exquisite to look at. But either her or it couldn't qualify. It jammed, was wildly inconsistent, etc? Maybe it was her or maybe the gun, but the main qualifying department gun was a .45 Glock 21 and she did fine with that? Anecdotal I know.
For off duty, I carried and still have a S&W SD9VE and it shot flawlessly and I did fine with it even with a heavy trigger, but I was used to it? I dunno?
Again, I think a decent quality firearm and consistent shooting skills eliminates many of the problems that a $2000 custom gun "fixes".
It would vary depending on what I was trying to do. I spent a pretty penny on a Hilton Yam 10-8 that I carried as a duty weapon. It worked well every time, and was a better platform than my skill level. I switched to the issue G21 because of the holster, not the pistol.
I bought top quality ARs (Bravo Company) as a long term investment in my well being, partly based on seeing what did and did not work in serious carbine classes with Pat Rogers and a Dean Caputo basic maintenance class. The number of lesser quality platforms that malfunctioned regularly was frightening, and interfered with that shooters learning and ours.
I am left handed, and long-term reliable ambi safeties on 1911s can be a problem. I have a custom 1911 that is mostly in the nature of a barbecue gun (the serial # is my bar #), and a 945-1 compact. If I were to buy another 1911, it would likely be in Super 38, and with features that work for me. Cost is not the same as value. A right hander can do well with a stock 1911 with decent sights most of the time. Back in the day, as others have noted, it took a lot of handwork to make a 1911 right for serious use; that is not so true now and for example the Tisa products seems to have a consistently good reputation.
Take this out of guns. I had a Subaru Legacy for several years and when it got to the point of a lot of wear (187K), I would have bought another but for two factors. One is that they no longer made one with a manual transmission, which was very disappointing. The other is that I wanted a vehicle that would take two good sized (Rott) dog crates. That meant an Ascent, for substantially more.
We are working on getting a Super C motor home built. The build quality of most RVs is abysmal, and I would never have a Class A for that and other reasons (acceptable quality starts at well over $1 million) and the power trains, brakes, suspension, handling, etc. generally are not near as good as a Super C built on a Class 8 truck. I can actually kept the cost within what I consider reasonable, because we will not have slides and other crud, but it has been a chore to find what I want and it looks like I will have to change platforms from a KW 880 to some Western Star model. I can make it work. It also avoids the crud that goes with flying.
It's the Indian.........Not the arrow.
Were you looking at just the bid numbers, or did what you saw include their 23% (or is it 26% these days) premium.![]()
Were you looking at just the bid numbers, or did what you saw include their 23% (or is it 26% these days) premium.![]()