So, program the CNC machine to cut some slots in the barrel rib, stone some surfaces on the inside and polish the outside. Put on appropriate grips, change the rollmark from King Cobra to Python, and voila, a $1000 gun becomes a $2300 gun.
I'll step up and call a BIG BS on that one! That's not even a good try!I have three 6 inch Pythons. Last one I got last year for $600.
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I'll step up and call a BIG BS on that one! That's not even a good try!
Can you post a larger image? That thing is tiny.One of the first pictures just got leaked:
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The standard model will not have a ribbed barrel. Gun has a polished SS frame and barrel. Laminated grips. MSRP of $2399. A ribbed barrel exclusive Colt’s Collectors run is set to be released with an MSRP of $2799. The run will be limited to 500 guns.
The craftsmen who produced the Python are long gone and Colt doesn’t have the ability to pick-up where they left off.
Whatever they release with same name, it won’t be the same. I’ll bet dollars to donuts they won’t have a clue how to service older versions.
They're testing the market. They know diehards will snub the gun since it won't ever pass a purist's test. They already experienced that with the current production Cobras. But they're pricing them just enough to see if the name will sell them at the higher price. And honestly, $2.5k is cheaper tha a used similar condition original Python.
If the guns don't move, they'll either lower the price, or drop them altogether. If every one of them is snatched up by a collector. They don't give a damn. They sold them and made their return on initial investment.
S&W does the same with their Classic Line. A bunch of knock off fraud clones of legit guns. They sell very well and people pay the prices they ask.
I am sure if Colt wanted, they could produce a "Python" on the current DS frame,
They did, it was called a Diamondback
I was watching a youtube video from the Yankee Marshall and he let it slip that they were re-releasing the Python.
YouTube
Sort of aligns with the recent Colt comments regarding discontinuation of sales of AR's so they could work on some other things. YMMV
I'm not a Python fanboy, but I recognize it's appeal in spite of the shortcomings.
Manufacturers in the firearms industry, every now and then, realize that on occasions in the past they created a product that went on to become an icon. More often, these same manufacturer themselves are simply a reorganization of a previous company of the same name.
Marketing almost dictates that said icon will be reissued.
A few "case in points":
-S&W Classic series
-SIG USA P210
-Mauser P08 Parabellum "Luger"
-Almost everything made of blued steel and walnut with the name "Wnchester" or "Browning" on it.
Every time it happens, people ask "How will it compare to the original?" And, "How will it affect the value of originals now that they are collector items?"
The answer to the first question is variable, and highly objective.
The answer to the second question is, almost without exception, the originals continue to climb in value.
Jim
PS: the answer to the second question is, to a degree, somewhat a commentary on the first question...!