Like most of us, I am very leery of dealing with anyone on Armslist but in this case I had a good experience that I'll share.
I saw a nice Winchester 9422M XTR which was a fairly rare version of that rifle in that it didn't have checkering which was only offered for a couple years at the beginning of the production run (early '70's) - someone can correct me if I'm wrong - and I prefer them that way. The seller communicated in a professional manner and we discussed other firearms, collections, etc. so I could tell he was "one of us". He also claimed to work at a local gun store and shooting range in both sales and instruction. So that sounded great. But I still asked for referrals and even called the gun shop to talk to the people there who worked with him. He's a fine upstanding guy they all liked. I was curious as to why he could not find a buyer with the hundreds of people who come through the shop and range and the answer was that those people were more into AR's and "black guns" and so were not interested, or well-versed, in lever-action rifles and older collectibles. So I guess for people who are not members of our forums Armslist provides one of the only easy ways for them to sell the gun. Certainly easier than GunBroker. Trouble is that most of us don't trust that site. Well, with proper due diligence I was able to secure peace of mind in dealing with this seller and I took delivery of the Winny yesterday. I'm not sure if it has ever been shot - it looks brand new and is just superb. A great find at a price substantially lower than what I think it's worth. Can't wait to take it out and shoot it now since my belief is there's no point in owning these fine firearms without shooting them. So the moral is, with proper caution Armslist can lead to a worry-free transaction.
I saw a nice Winchester 9422M XTR which was a fairly rare version of that rifle in that it didn't have checkering which was only offered for a couple years at the beginning of the production run (early '70's) - someone can correct me if I'm wrong - and I prefer them that way. The seller communicated in a professional manner and we discussed other firearms, collections, etc. so I could tell he was "one of us". He also claimed to work at a local gun store and shooting range in both sales and instruction. So that sounded great. But I still asked for referrals and even called the gun shop to talk to the people there who worked with him. He's a fine upstanding guy they all liked. I was curious as to why he could not find a buyer with the hundreds of people who come through the shop and range and the answer was that those people were more into AR's and "black guns" and so were not interested, or well-versed, in lever-action rifles and older collectibles. So I guess for people who are not members of our forums Armslist provides one of the only easy ways for them to sell the gun. Certainly easier than GunBroker. Trouble is that most of us don't trust that site. Well, with proper due diligence I was able to secure peace of mind in dealing with this seller and I took delivery of the Winny yesterday. I'm not sure if it has ever been shot - it looks brand new and is just superb. A great find at a price substantially lower than what I think it's worth. Can't wait to take it out and shoot it now since my belief is there's no point in owning these fine firearms without shooting them. So the moral is, with proper caution Armslist can lead to a worry-free transaction.