Old 22 ammo

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Those would be great for someone collecting them and
paring with Old Gun collection.

Is there bullets in the boxes?

As for price if they are full……$10.00/box?
 
Nice little group. If they are all full they will bring a bit more than partial boxes, empties have little demand unless they are a rare or very old box. I sell some boxes at the OGCA shows, usually the yellow Super X and Winchester boxes go for @ 10 to 12 bucks (if the bigger one is 22 Mag or WRF it will bring more). The 22 Win Auto I would put at @ 40 bucks. The Leader box maybe 20. Your Remington boxes are 1940's and 50's era, I sold a few at the last show for 10 each. Not sure on the tins or blanks, haven't had any myself lately. Saw a few tins on other tables, iirc they were asking @ 30 for theirs. No idea at all on the Ramset box.

These prices were for full boxes and reflect what I have actually sold stuff for. I do this as a hobby and sideline to my gun collecting addiction as I find the old boxes fascinating and collect them myself. The ammo collector market is different and I've found if I price stuff too close to the online dealers prices it doesn't sell so I try to find a happy medium where I can actually sell a few (and be willing to negotiate!) and use the funds to buy other stuff I want. Good luck with yours!
 
Love vintage ammo, there is a niche market for NIB vintage ammo
Not sure on values but these sure would look nice in a display or professional photographs like you see here on the forum.
-Sam
 
I agree with most everything posted. The .22 Winchester Auto Rimfire is the most valuable and should bring $30-$40. It's exclusive to the the Winchester Model 1903 rifle.

I'd probably put $15 each on the Remington dog-bone and the shot box and price the others at $10.

The CCI box looks like an early one. If the back is marked Cascade Cartridge Inc instead of just CCI, it might bring a slight premium to a collector.
 
Extra Loud

Here is a picture of the other side of the box. Not sure what makes it extra loud. Got this stuff from my dad. In the late 50's he was in a fast draw club in Ft. Worth. They would do exhibitions at County Fairs and Frontier Days and such. Thinking he might have wanted something extra loud for that.
 

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There were several additional uses for blanks - theatrical use, dog training, etc. I once had a "CanGo" empty beer can launcher that used .22 blanks for propulsion. It would shoot an empty beer can to a considerable height as a shotgun target. I probably still have it stashed away someplace, haven't seen it for years.
 
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