Ever find a gun you thought you would never find or afford?

In the Never Thought I Could Afford One category, I always wanted a nice shotgun.

Same here. I waited forty years to get a nice SXS. My Beretta 471 is fabulous! Not top of the line, but perfect for me.

From the comments I get in the field, many others have the same dream.
 
Yes........ luck is a good thing..................

Registered Mag. at a early 2000s 6" 28 price.

My carry 3" 66............ unrecognized as a uncommon barrel length....... listed on tag as 2 1/2"

A couple of model 17s used but not abused.

A 98%+ Pre 39 that brought 4X's what I paid for it.

course it took decades.......................
 
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Yes
For years and years I have been a fan of the Andy Griffith show and I wanted a Colt official police .38 caliber revolver just the like the one barney carried.

And for years and years I searched and I searched but no luck on those rare occasions I did see one it was to expensive.

Then one day I went to this little mom & pop gun shop in Pekin Illinois that I visit regularly and their in one of the display case's was a colt official police .38 caliber revolver with a 4 inch barrel and nickel finish for $200.

I examined that gun and I said to myself "Aside from the finish this is the exact same revolver that Barney fife carried."

That same day I went home counted my gun fund money and I had exactly $200 in the fund so I called the store and asked them to hold the gun for me and that I would be down their the next day to buy it.

The next day after breakfast dad and I got into his truck and he took every shortcut he knew between our house and that gun store.

When the store opened I went in their point out the gun in the display case the nice lady behind the counter took it out of the case I handed her the money.

after the paperwork and the back round check was done I was the proud owner of a Colt official police .38 caliber.

I sold it a few years later because my family needed the money after I sold it I cried and cursed for over a week. And to this day all these years later whenever I go to a gun store I look for it hoping and praying to find it.
 
This one: a pre Model 45 .22 LR "Post Office gun". Sure it isn't in great condition but that condition put it at a price level most of us could live with and many would jump all over.

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Yep a couple of times, but about a month ago I scored a slightly defective Lawson 650 Mountaineer in 300WM. I've been wanting a full blown Lawson custom rifle since I was 13 years old... only took 27 years to find one I could reasonably afford. Picked it up the day before my 40th birthday. Can't tell from the horrible cell phone pics, but the epoxy finish on the stock is spiderwebbing. I might send it back to Lawson to have them refinish it, or I may just live with the disfigurement and make it my go to hunting rifle - the damage is purely cosmetic.

 
Oh, I got another one. I was checking the counter at an LGS, and spotted a Browning Medalist. LNIB. I had wanted one decades before, and there it was. Did some dealing, and got a good price on it.

Should I shoot it? HAH! I violated it like a teenage boy. Love to shoot it, but, lately, my M41 has been getting more trigger time.
 

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I might send it back to Lawson to have them refinish it, or I may just live with the disfigurement and make it my go to hunting rifle - the damage is purely cosmetic.

I have a Browning T2 T-bolt from the 1960s I bought new. It has the *** salt stock. Many years ago, I stripped off the factory shiny stuff, and oil finished the stock. It turned out super. You might consider that for your Lawson.
 

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I've been fortunate to find several additions to the collection I never thought I'd find or afford.

Found a shooter grade 3" M-66-2 at a local show listed as a 2 1/2" gun. Snagged it for a bargain price. Had wanted one for about ten years.

At the Reno show five years back I fell into not one, but a pair of very nice pre M-29's, both 6 1/2" blued guns. One was an estate sale gun in the black cardboard presentation case. The other was a solid, original gun that had been used but not abused. Had I not found those two guns when I did, I doubt I could have afforded either of them even a few years later.

As I have luckily filled voids in the S&W revolver collection my WANTED items became the rarer models. Both tougher to find as well as expensive. One of these was an early Combat Magnum. I'd always been a fan of the CM but all of mine were later 19's and 66's.

I luckily found a very early CM last year at the Reno Show. Wrong stocks, but I also found a proper set of period correct stocks for a fair price at the same show.

 
I tend to have an affinity for rarer items, particularly custom-action German Weatherby Mk Vs with 26" bbls (specific enough for ya?)
The majority of the custom-action Mk Vs are either 24" guns or Japanese mfg. I've also been able to track down some of the rarer pre-ban rifles, particularly Belgian FALs and Valmets.
 
Yep a couple of times, but about a month ago I scored a slightly defective Lawson 650 Mountaineer in 300WM. I've been wanting a full blown Lawson custom rifle since I was 13 years old... only took 27 years to find one I could reasonably afford. Picked it up the day before my 40th birthday. Can't tell from the horrible cell phone pics, but the epoxy finish on the stock is spiderwebbing. I might send it back to Lawson to have them refinish it, or I may just live with the disfigurement and make it my go to hunting rifle - the damage is purely cosmetic.
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I once had a collection of Weatherby rifles. Some of the early mauser action and German ones had the spider webbing.

The first was a Mauser action with a very low SN in 270 WBY. It shot like a lazer. I loved the gun, my Dad gave me his pre 64 Win M-70. Every year he'd ask if I killed my deer with his gun. I had to say no. I sold the WBY so I would use the old M-70 and killed my largest wall hanger with it. I now use the M70 until I take the 1st deer.

The WBY had the gloss finish with the spider web cracks, I hate shiny stocks and have always used 4 oooo steel wool to knock the shine off and then polish it well with rubbing compound and then stock wax. It leaves a hand rubbed oil finish look.

When I did it on the WBY to rid it of the shiny stock most of the webbing also vanished. With the satin sheen it was still there but not as heavy and harder too see.

I also did that to my German 300 WBY, a Browning BAR and a few others. I liked the results.

I remember reading about the Larson and always kept an eye open but never found one.

I tape off the checkering and work the stock down a little, don't take all the Polyurathane off.

I am a little different than most, I shoot my guns. I have a sneaking hunch that was what they were made for.
 
When I was a young man I had the chance to shoot Korth revolvers of affluent friends and was impressed by the obvious quality and amazing double action trigger.

I had lusted for a Korth for 30 years before I bought one.

4GowKtEh.jpg


A couple of years ago I decided to start a small collection and have no buyer's remorse in this case.
 

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Ever find a gun you thought you would never see again?

When I turned 16 in 1959, I could legally own a rifle where I lived. I walked over to a local hardware store, plunked down my saved up newspaper and caddie money, and happily carried a Marlin 39A with a 4x Marlin scope back to my house. Forward to 1975, I moved into a new (to me) house where I met a wonderful couple who lived across the street. They were my parents' age, and became like a 2nd mother and father away from home. Forward to ~1990 - I had moved, they had moved, but we stayed in touch. One day he told me that squirrels were destroying his bird feeders, but he couldn't hit them with his Marlin bolt .22 because had knocked the scope out of zero. I gave him my rifle to use while I took his to re-zero it for him. It took longer than I expected because one of the mount screws was stripped, and between that and lots of work travel, a year or two passed. When I took the repaired rifle back, the new owners of his house told me he moved because his wife had a terminal illness, but didn't know where. I could not find a phone or a tax record for him. His first and last names were very common. After some more years, I remembered him mentioning a son by name. No record of him either. In 2013, while using the internet for genealogy, I stumbled upon my friend's obituary, where two more sons were named. No phone listings for them either. The obit mentioned that one son worked for the state Attorney General's office. I called the office - bingo - it was the right one. He told me that my friend and his wife moved in with the oldest son, hence no public record, that they both had passed on, and that he didn't have the gun. He gave me a contact for the other sons, and after 3 cancelled meet-ups, we made a connection and swapped; I had my first gun back after ~20 years, and he had his father's gun.
For years, I despaired of ever getting my first gun back, and it's now not ever going out without me. It's back in the corner, in its case, where it's never run out and shot anybody in 56 years.
 
I had posted this before but it sure fits in here.
I went to a local gun shop to try the feel of a Ruger revolver. As the gent behind the counter opened the case to reach for the Ruger, parked next to it was a S&W with a tag that read K-32 at $600.00. I looked up at the gent and told him I'd take the S&W. He then told me "You know the barrel has been cut down from 6" to the 4" I saw in the case". I said I didn't care. He then told me the grips didn't number. I told him I didn't care. I bought the 5 screw K-32 with the 4" barrel. Turned out to be one of ten K-32 Combat Masterpieces built in 1949. Lettered as K.32 Masterpiece Pre-Model 16. There were 10 built and the factory charged $6.00 to cut the barrels down to 4".
qjjem3u
 
There are several guns I found that I never thought I would find or afford:
They say that even a blind squirrel finds a nut

In close to 40 years of admiring these fine firearms, there are many Smith and Wessons that I am surprised I have found. This includes ones that I was actively seeking and others that simply appeared. Here are some fo my favorites:


One of the Master Engraved Deluxe Texas Ranger Commemoratives.

texas%20ranger%20med.jpg



One of the Deluxe Texas Sesquicentennial Commemoratives.

twt-d1s.jpg



One of the engraved, Nickel, model 45s

Model%2045s.jpg



A 649 from the first day of production. One of the 25 selected to become a Special Engraved Limited Edition

649E2s.jpg



Not only a 3566 Limited, but the one that had the second Performance Center fitted top end for shooting 40 S&W.

3566bs.jpg



An unissued Rhode Island State Police model 66 with the factory installed lanyard loop

risp%20model%2066%20small.jpg
 
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I have a Browning T2 T-bolt from the 1960s I bought new. It has the *** salt stock. Many years ago, I stripped off the factory shiny stuff, and oil finished the stock. It turned out super. You might consider that for your Lawson.

I see you still have the peep sight mounted. I've got one like yours, bought new by me in 1966. When I see them at gun shows and such, they never have the sight or single shot pieces. The T2 had the longer barrel and was nearly target gun accurate. Its been my go to 22 for the last 49 years.. coming up on 50.
 
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