696 no dash price check

Jocalz

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I need a price check on a 98-99% 696 no dash. The gun appears to have been fired just a couple times. There are a couple small handling marks. No box or papers.
 
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I need a price check on a 98-99% 696 no dash. The gun appears to have been fired just a couple times. There are a couple small handling marks. No box or papers.
 
Sounds like $700 - $800 to me
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Bill
 
Very limited run, very hard to find, and the new holy grail for collectors. Add it up and your looking at eight bills easy. In two years from now the ones you can find will be going for a grand.
 
Gunbroker has the capability to search completed auctions. This is a quick way to evaluate a price. With just a quick look, in the past 90 days, several of these have sold. All were in the $700-800 range. Cheapest one that I saw (that actually changed hands) went for just over $700. That's about par for the course with these guns. Several auctions were posted with reserves in excess of $900.
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I really wish I had gotten one of these when they were in the $500s and still in production, but I put it off and when S&W discontinued them they either disappeared or instantly jumped a couple hundred in price.
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Originally posted by toroflow1:
Recall that one of our own forum members here sold a 696 for $1300 (in CA though).

And another forum member bought it. Let me note that the gun came with S&W combats as well as the stock rubber grip, so that boosted the price somewhat. It was also a no-dash. Yes, this is California, and yes, I paid next year's price (or the year after's) for a gun I wanted today. But I had already missed a chance at one 696, and I wasn't about to let another one get away. I didn't buy it as a trader; I bought it as a keeper. For this one gun under these particular circumstance, the price was right for me. For most other people , the asking price would have triggered a quick walkaway.

I don't think my action says anything about the real world price of 696s for anybody else. I would tend to think that 800-900 is a reasonable price in the broad market, and maybe 10-15% more in California or some other tough state. If I were in a state with looser acquisition policies, I would buy all I could get at 750 or less and hold them.

As an aside, I'm still hoping to learn exactly how many 696s were made of each version, but a posting to the list several weeks ago makes me think that even the factory has no clear answer to that one.

David W.
 
I picked up a NIB 696 (No-Dash) a few weeks ago. I paid top dollar for it ($900) but it is absolutely perfect, unfired with all the original papers/tools. I hadn't seen a NIB 696 come up for sale in quite some time.

I bought it to shoot but have since had second thoughts. I think it's just going to live in my safe for a few years...
 
Though mines a -1, I'm happy to have it for the five bills I gave last August. Had an opportunity to aquire a no dash in January for $800, but passed.
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Bad timing.
 
Thanks for all the input. I'm still undecided on what to do. The gun has been sitting in this shop for a couple months. It has a couple scratches on it the worst being on the bottom of the trigger guard. I'm not sure if the scratches can be removed. Maybe I should just get it, shoot it and not worry about it. It's only money.
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Being a SS gun, I would think it would have to be nicked or dinged real bad to not clean-up like new? SS is the metal all the way thru, not a finish.

If it's a no-dash or even a dash-1, the price is up to you as to whether or not it is a deal.
They have been very desirable in the last few years and will continue to be.

Look for a cracked forcing cone though...they are the thinnest of the L-frame guns @ .44 caliber.
 
I found a 100% condition 696 no-dash at a local shop last year for $425. At first I thought it was a 629, but quickly realized what it was and had my wallet out pronto.
 

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