Art Doc
SWCA Member, Absent Comrade
Common sense.
Never say never. An old Corvette (say a mid-year 60's one) that's in 90% condition would be valued more than a restored Corvette, apples to apples.
Same with an older run of the mill Smith. At 90% a restore will lower the value, but at 50% ( finish wear, rust, or freckling)a good re-finish could add value.
. . . an older run of the mill Smith. At 90% a restore will lower the value, but at 50% ( finish wear, rust, or freckling)a good re-finish could add value.
No refinish, please!
Here’s a gun that would have an increase in value with a refinish.
![]()
![]()
Here is the problem. A 44 Magnum is not a run of the mill Smith in any condition!
Demand for a non-Model numbered N frame 44 is very strong amongst collectors and SHOULD NOT be refinished period! A refinished early 44 Magnum would at best be worth half of what a 90% original would be. *** A 50% pre-Model 44 Magnum would still be worth more than a refinished gun as well after one has to pay for the refinish.***
Re-bluing a sought after S&W model eliminates all the collector interest and value so now you are mostly attracting the uneducated and the bargain hunters. Most people with big money would not care much about what it is, but rather why is it no longer original?? If you want a pristine 44 Mag, go buy a new one and sell that one to someone who would appreciate it just as it is.
Lastly, who would refinish the gun? Are you talking about a premium gun restoration company? If so, $500 would probably be the down-payment. If you are talking about a local hot blue specialist, good luck on getting someone who knows what they are doing. The result could well be heavy buffing, smearing or obliterating the stampings, or ending up with a blued gun and a plum brown cylinder as is often the case.
Not wanting an argument here, but I disagree. No collector wants a 50% rust pitted gun in their collection, some people just don't like shooting ugly guns.
Fords in Florida have done good work for me at $500-$600.
here's a pre-27 they did for me.
Even if you make the gun worth more, there's a good chance the combined cost of the refinish (include shipping and prep work) will still be a net loosing preposition.
I'd only get a gun refinished if it's something I wanted to do. A good refinish isn't going to be cheap and a cheap refinish probably isn't going to be a good refinish.
Here is my 29-2 wouldn't change a thing...Rust and its aftermath is usually ugly, but simple bluing wear naturally accumulated through use can be beautiful. I wouldn't refinish this gun in a million years. It looks even more interesting than in these photos. But tastes vary, of course.
![]()
![]()
Buy it for what it is and when you find a nicer one,replace it with that one.