Gun Show Find - The Nation's Gun Show, Chantilly, VA

jackvs1

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So today I went to the local gun show. The find - beef jerky, fudge, jewelry, coins, lots of overpriced ammo, tables after tables of knives, rifles and overpriced revolvers (junk). Oh well, hope for a better next time.
 
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Well at least you didn't have to go to multiple stores!! One stop shopping.

Shows certainly are not what they used to be. But then there is the off chance that you
find that hidden gem! It is a flip of the coin.
 
Well damn, I was going to go but now no so sure-- :( nothing I need, but then again?? two hour ride up and then back,cost to get in-- not sure it is worth it--- maybe I can just order those full moon clips for that 1917??? :)
 
Where's the Beef? or Elk or Buffalo or?

I like me some jerky meat.

All kidding aside, Most gun shows do look like a swap meet anymore. :rolleyes:
 
I think we all go hoping to find "that" deal. There was just nothing that interested me.
 
Hit one of the normally BETTER and larger shows this afternoon. ZERO interesting items that were not priced as if they were NEW IN BOX (and none were). Or simply priced +30% higher just for fun. I can barely keep my temper with the pricing.

A NEW IN BOX example sells on Gunbroker for $X dollars Now EVERY similar gun is believed to be worth that same amount. Doesn't matter if it's a 85% example, missing the proper grips, worn to heck, etc.


I'm a firm believer you have to attend to FIND anything good. But these DRY times sure get old.
 
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Don't write off this show just yet. Back in 2006, I scheduled my leave from Afghanistan in order to make this show. Flew into Dulles airport, rented a car, and got a motel room. Went to the show that Friday evening and walked around. Nothing jumped out and grabbed me, but I decided to make one more quick pass.

I started down the aisle and saw a glass case that had several old revolvers. One was a nickel 5" N frame that I had missed on my first pass. An examination revealed that it was a .44 Special!!! It was wearing late '30s large medallion service grips. I asked the seller if he would remove the grips and there was a factory stamp from Febuary 1942 there. I talked him down $50 and bought it.

Checking the SCSW 2nd edition showed that the first third model .44 Special was serial number 28358. The one in my hand was 28363. Later on, a factory letter showed that it was part of the the first shipment of 3rd models sent to Wolf & Klar of Fort Worth, Texas on January 27th, 1927, seventy (75) 5" nickel .44s.

To date, this is the lowest numbered surviving 3rd model in the S&W collector's data base.

So, gold CAN be found at a gun show.
 
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When I hit gun shows I totally ignore the non gun stuff. I move as quick as I can through the crowd focusing on a specific gun I
want and do not focus on any gun that I have zero interest in. Then I go back a little slower and look again. I have found things on the third trip that someone just traded for.

Usually I'll take a break after the 2nd trip at the food counter watching to see if someone walks by with something neat. Bought a Ruger 357 cheap, doubled my money before I got back to start the 3rd trip. Guy wanted it for CAS and this was all he could afford. I found a 27-2 in 3.5" on a 3rd trip, tucked into a corner. I'd seen the guy and his gun at other shows. Stopped and talked, discussed the S&W, he let it go really reasonable.

Sunday as folks are packing up is another great time to get a bargain. Sometimes they will let one go cheap to pay for the motel, food and gas home.

Of course this was before I retired and had disposable income. Now I might be able to afford a piece of that there fudge. :(
 
I haven't been to a regular gun show in years...too many newbie amateurs waving guns around, too many dealers with unrealistic prices, too much expensive, wildly overpriced ammo...not fun!

I do love to go to the Maryland Arms Collectors show in Timonium every year, just to look at all the antique and collectible guns that I'll never be able to afford to buy. ("Oh, I see...$18,000 for that rifle...I'll take two, please!")
 
Sorry to hear the bad news about Chantilly. I have never been able to attend until just lately and was hoping to make the show soon.

Previously, many local dealers had related it as one of the best around.
 
I've been to Chantilly several times. Never found anything I was interested in. I think the promoter should limit display items to guns and gun related items. All the other **** is offensive.

Looking for a good gun at one of these gun shows makes me feel like a crow trying to find a kernel of corn in a pile of cow manure.
 
I think the promoter should limit display items to guns and gun related items. All the other **** is offensive. Looking for a good gun at one of these gun shows makes me feel like a crow trying to find a kernel of corn in a pile of cow manure.

Good luck with that. The promoter's gonna sell as many tables as possible, try his best to fill the venue. What dealers sell is a secondary consideration, so long as it isn't something that might get the feds involved. I never get my hopes of finding that kernel of corn you mention too high. Just look at it as a way to spend a few hours on a weekend morning/afternoon.
 
Gun collecting is a dying past-time. The gray-hairs far exceed the young. And with us, the old memorabilia is disappearing. But I still go to find that one item that may surface once in a while.

As to the jerky and pepper cheese, I enjoy these for a healthy lunch when I'm doing out of town GSs. Better than the snack bars. And without these vendors, the shows would die out faster.
 
I've seen a few good knives here and there. The sellers say they're "Damascus steel" and I know what that is but I'm not knowledgeable enough to tell quality or were it was made so I pass
 
So today I went to the local gun show. The find - beef jerky, fudge, jewelry, coins, lots of overpriced ammo, tables after tables of knives, rifles and overpriced revolvers (junk). Oh well, hope for a better next time.

I used to think the jewelery tables will not make it at the shows because who buys that junk. Well they are still renting tables.

Maybe its a ruse by some guys who want a excuse to get to the shows.
 
Who buys the jewelry? I do for one. My wife will pick out some inexpensive earrings about every time we go to one. It's a cheap thank you to her for going. Sure they're cheap but they're good enough for her to wear for everyday use.

Jerkey dealers, beanie babies, jewelry dealers are there for one reason. That's where the people are. If the people weren't buying that stuff, they wouldn't keep coming back. Plain old free enterprise. Seems like a good thing to me. If I don't want any jerkey, I just walk on by. They don't cost me anything. And I still a lot more gun related stuff than I do "junk."

We love to go to gun shows. I think I've bought one gun in all the years I've been going to them. Sold a couple others. My wife and I drive to ones out of town just to have a destination. We enjoy a nice drive, stop for lunch or dinner. Walk around the show. Talk to people. Watch the people. Go home.

Cheap entertainment.
 

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