What’s your most bizarre or unusual gun trade?

Wyatt Burp

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Here's mine. In the late 80s I was driving through gold rush country and in an antique shop bought two NOS 60s kid's lunch boxes. So new there was tissue paper in the thermoses. They were "The Wild, Wild West, and "Land Of The Giants". $15 each. A few years later a guy at work, Jim, wanted them. Another guy, Howard, had a like new Browning B92 .357 he wanted $300 for. I told Jim, "You give Howard $300, he'll give me his rifle, and I!ll give you the lunchboxes". We did just that and everyone was happy.
 
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It was down at a Ruidosa, NM Gunshow.
I have a table but I'm cruising and looking.
OMG, is that what I think it is?
Pick it up, look it over.
Yeah! It's a Pre-29!
So trying not to look too eager, I ask, how much?
He answered it's not for sale!
Say what?
It's for trade. I want a Browning Citori!
I mumbled, I ain't got no Citori!
He pointed to a nearby table and said, he does.
So - am I getting this right.
You'll trade this Smith for that Citori?
You got it Cowboy!
So I asked him to accompany me over to the Browning.
Didn't want to buy the wrong Citori!
Did the deal.
Here it is.
 

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Traded a custom knife that I paid a small fortune for to a guy that had a Beretta Model of 1934.

I felt really stupid that I paid so much for the knife and wanted it gone...(engraved, scrimshaw, Damascus, known/listed custom maker...I couldn't resist!:rolleyes:) ...thought the .380 was cool.

I lost out monetarily probably at least $1K but still, traded a knife for a gun.
 
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In 1984 I bought a 4" SfW Model 34 .22 in my favorite pawn shop for $169. I shot it, took it camping, then the shop called saying they needed it back as it was stolen. But they gave me $450 credit in the place. I instantly chose the 1966 Colt factory nickel 4 3/4" .357 they had at that exact price. I soon traded that for the 7 1/2" renickeled 1958 SAA .45 I still have and shoot.
 
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Back in the mid 60s I was selling a nice modal 94 in 32 Winchester special caliber.

Man at the gun club made a offer for the gun but it was not quite enough. He was driving a two 4 BBL early 2 seater Thunderbird. I told him I would sell him the gun but I also wanted 20 minutes seat time in the TBird. He agree and off we went.-:D
 
I traded a Model A Uzi which included full auto bolt and 8" (2" showing) barrel , straight across for a very nice 1955 Chevy 2 door post which I later (within a year) sold for three times what I was into the Uzi. I did the deal with an airman from Fairchild, AFB and often wondered how he dealt with that kind of firearm on base. The car was also one of the wierdest car deals I ever did. When I saw it I assumed it had been stripped/dechromed by a previous owner then nicely painted a metallic green, it had the 235 six and three speed on the tree. When I put it up for sale in a local rag sheet a guy called from a neighboring state and asked if I would hold onto it until he got a chance to see it. He said he would be there the next day. I agreed, the next day a beautiful torquise over white '57 Chevy pulled up in the drive. The guy gets out, introduces himself, asks if he can examine my '55. He smokes it over, crawls underneath it, spends fifteen minutes and asks about my price. I told him I had no reason to reduced it from $1,800.00 because he was the first guy to look at it. He said "Take a check?" I told him "No." He pulled out his business card which stated that who he was and that he was in a restoration business, and a three ring binder check-book with equally imposing proof. I called a friend who knew of him and that he was straight arrow. Did the deal, afterwards the guys said "You probably don't know about what you had." I told him I thought I had a stripped down 2 door post. He said "You had a 150 series Chevy, basically what used to be called a "Business Coupe" except it had a back seat. It was the cheapest car Chevrolet ever built, even a heater was an option, he had checked and there weren't grease fittings on the universals. According to him there isn't supposed to be any chrome except the bumpers, none around the windows, none down the side, just lettering. He said "They are rare in this condition because they weren't produced in large numbers and most got used up in jalopy races, or bought by hot rodders because they are already stripped. It did have a chrome grill, when he saw the picture of no chrome around the windows and sides he got a hunch and it paid off. I didn't care, I had $1,800.00 when those things went for under a grand. It was a nice straight, rust free example.
 
My 1 st of many: Around 1965, my next door neighbor kid had a rusted shut Marlin 7 shot b/a rifle that he wanted to trade for the Daisy Red Ryder that I got, beat bup from my cousin. Took me a week to get that rifle in tip-top shape. Put thousands of rounds through it until I moved to Florida. My brother in law gave it to my nephew; I believe he turned it into a "buyback as it had no serial number which only started on long guns in 1968. I still have a NIB magazine for it. Joe
 
It was down at a Ruidosa, NM Gunshow.
I have a table but I'm cruising and looking.
OMG, is that what I think it is?
Pick it up, look it over.
Yeah! It's a Pre-29!
So trying not to look too eager, I ask, how much?
He answered it's not for sale!
Say what?
It's for trade. I want a Browning Citori!
I mumbled, I ain't got no Citori!
He pointed to a nearby table and said, he does.
So - am I getting this right.
You'll trade this Smith for that Citori?
You got it Cowboy!
So I asked him to accompany me over to the Browning.
Didn't want to buy the wrong Citori!
Did the deal.
Here it is.

You got the better end of that deal. IMHO, Citoris leave a lot to be desired. Don't like Japanese shooters
 
My wife is a country woman so say the least. When asked what she wanted for her anniversary (20th) her reply was a cement mixer. Bought one at a yard sale for $25 and she was happy. I loaned it out several times over the years. One man was building a block wall shop and had it for several months. Feeling bad he offered to trade the mixer for a pistol he had. I had $25 invested so I went to look at his trading stock. Straight across trade for a Thompson Center Contender with a custom Sisk barrel in 375 JDJ with a 2 power Leupold scope and holster. Told the Mrs. I traded off her anniversary present. She hounded me till I found her another one at a yard sale for $50.
 
My wife is a country woman so say the least. When asked what she wanted for her anniversary (20th) her reply was a cement mixer. Bought one at a yard sale for $25 and she was happy. I loaned it out several times over the years. One man was building a block wall shop and had it for several months. Feeling bad he offered to trade the mixer for a pistol he had. I had $25 invested so I went to look at his trading stock. Straight across trade for a Thompson Center Contender with a custom Sisk barrel in 375 JDJ with a 2 power Leupold scope and holster. Told the Mrs. I traded off her anniversary present. She hounded me till I found her another one at a yard sale for $50.


I have a buddy that is a Contender nut, funny thing is that his wife is actually the one that got into collecting Contenders. They have a number of complete collections including all of the off shoots like those made by JD Jones. He actually gave me all the information I needed when I made my first Contender purchase which was a wierd deal all its own. The barrel was made by Bullberry barrels in .321 Bullberry. Bullberry was approached by the Coors Bottling Co. and asked if he could make them a dozen pistols for a Schuetzen match. .321 Bullberry uses a 32-40 case with a quarter of an inch cut off, the bullet is cast and sized to a true .321 and is breech seated with a special tool. The thing is amazing to shoot and easily holds an inch at 100 yards, with a Burris 10X scope.

 
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My 1 st of many: Around 1965, my next door neighbor kid had a rusted shut Marlin 7 shot b/a rifle that he wanted to trade for the Daisy Red Ryder that I got, beat bup from my cousin. Took me a week to get that rifle in tip-top shape. Put thousands of rounds through it until I moved to Florida. My brother in law gave it to my nephew; I believe he turned it into a "buyback as it had no serial number which only started on long guns in 1968. I still have a NIB magazine for it. Joe

Metal follower? I'll bet it is for a Marlin 80. Hard to find. Ask me how I know! I have the Sears Ranger 36, same gun made for Sears by Marlin from 1934-39. I've got one extra magazine with a bent follower for mine.

Marlin did make some for the later model guns that use a plastic follower but they don't always function in the older versions. Supposed to be able to modify them but those dried up during the last bankruptcy. I knew how to modify it but sold it one day when a customer came in separately searching for that magazine for his kids rifle. I sold it to him and erroneously figured I could get another one easily.

The shop I worked at previously dealt with a lot of antique and military firearms. Being in a rural farming area we got a lot of barn finds in there, that's how mine came in the doors.
 
I traded a .455 S&W that had been rechambered to .45 Colt and a 1897 Winchester shotgun for a '53 F100. Wound up trading the truck for a Falcon and later sold the Falcon at a loss. I should kept either the guns or the truck.

My best trade was a used bullet proof vest that had been given to me by the FOP for a Ruger Service Six .357. I had another vest that fit me better and was much more comfortable that I wore daily.
 
I've made a couple...

I traded a Fisher turntable for a Montgomery Wards turntable and a Walther PPK/S in .22 LR. It was 1978, I was 18, and it was my first pistol.

At a flea market about 25 years ago I bought a Marlin Model 60 that was extremely dirty for 30 bucks. I cleaned it up, took it to the next gun show, and traded it straight across for a NIB Sheridan .20 cal. pellet rifle.

About 20 years ago I traded a Taurus .357 for an Epiphone Les Paul. The guy I traded it to was in trouble with his GF for bringing home a gun, and I was in trouble with the wife for bringing home yet another noisy musical instrument!

Oh yeah! In the early 90's at a pawnshop in Blackfoot, Idaho, I traded a stack of leather postcards all postmarked 1906 and 1907 for a Springfield Armory 1911A1. The owner thought she had a hit the jackpot and traded easily. I found out a few years later they weren't worth nearly what either one of us thought they were.
 
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Can't think of any unusual gun trades, but an interesting bicycle purchase. I wanted a bicycle made by an Italian racer who settled in Canada. He set the one hour record on the track for 70 year old and attempted but missed for 80 year olds. Giuseppe Marinoni.

I find one for sale in Florida Gulf Coast for a fair price and make a deal without knowing if I'll pay $100 to ship or pick it up next time I'm down there. I realize my brother is cruising near on his 43' trawler and ask him if he's going near. He's going past a marina a mile from the sellers house in 3 days. They meet and stow the bike with the wheels off in the forward V berth, and I picked it up from my brothers car the next time I went to Florida. Pretty white bike with red fading at head, bottom bracket, and seat post.
 
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Years ago, a guy wanted to buy a cow from me. He was a little light on cash, and asked to throw a couple guns in on the deal. A Remington rifle and Mossberg shotgun came out. He went home with a cow and I later sold the guns as they weren't anything I needed.
 
More fortunate than unusual, but I got lucky when CZ moved to Kansas City. They had just changed US location and had recently bought Dan Wesson. They had a fairly large rectangle of tables lined with good deals on rifles, some apparently dead stock, most were around $400 regardless of chambering.

I had a choice of older Brno ZZK602 magnums in 375 H&H or 458 Win Mag. I got a 458 for $400. I called the CZ distributor once with a question about my rifle and they acted like they never sold it. Maybe technically they didn't, as maybe all those guns were possibly sold to a dealer.

Then I go to another table and buy a Model 18 S&W TTT, but the bonus from the same dealer was a Dan Wesson Razorback for $675. I suspect he picked it up from the CZ distributor at that show. It was numbered as the 7th Razorback made that year, possibly from parts after CZ took over.

That was when my state had pistol permits, so I wasn't able to pick up the handguns that day but picked them up later at the dealer 260 miles away. That was a fun but long motorcycle trip to pick up those two pistols, and another at another dealer on the way back
 
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Way too many crazy trades to list, but here's one that I was reminded of a few days ago.

A couple years ago, me and a buddy went to a show in Carson City, where I stumbled across a cherry 3" 13-3. After a little haggling, I walked away the proud owner of a beautiful 3" 13 and $780 lighter. That evening we were sitting around admiring our daily take, when he said, "I want your 13, will you consider a trade?" He disappeared for a few minutes, returning with a ANIB, 3" 625-3 and the original box of ammo that was short 6 rounds. It wasn't a difficult decision, especially since I already had a 3" 13.
 

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A while back I ran a lot of ads in the Free Giveaway Newspapers.
Including I buy guns, and I'll trade for guns.
Got out of wood burning stoves and had a Neato Norwegian Wood Stove to move. Ad time!
Get a call, how bout a Colt SA? Come on over!
Turns out it's a Retired Deputy Sheriff with a hurt Blackpowder Frame Colt.
But - but it was used in a Movie.
He was a Deputy Extra in Lonesome Are The Brave.
He's on a big boulder when Curt Douglas gets off his horse and circles around.
And it's in a Gin -U-Wine Mexican Buscadera Rig. And a Real Cowboy Caliber, 44-40.
To the Gun Show I go.
My Buddy Jerry has to have the Colt. Trade it to him for a new Breitling Watch.
Another dude has to have the watch. Trade the watch for a Walther PP and money. Sell the Walther.
So the stove is gone, the Colt is gone, the Watch is gone, the Walther and the money are gone.
But I'm still here!
The lesson here is - Keep on Keeping on.
 
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Big Smile

Here's mine. In the late 80s I was driving through gold rush country and in an antique shop bought two NOS 60s kid's lunch boxes. So new there was tissue paper in the thermoses. They were "The Wild, Wild West, and "Land Of The Giants". $15 each. A few years later a guy at work, Jim, wanted them. Another guy, Howard, had a like new Browning B92 .357 he wanted $300 for. I told Jim, "You give Howard $300, he'll give me his rifle, and I!ll give you the lunchboxes". We did just that and everyone was happy.

I have traded ammo for dental work.
👍👍👍👍👍
 
Back in about 1980 I traded a model 13 for a 1948 panhead engine, original frame and transmission...

Still always regretted not having the model 13 though.. :)
 
Around 75 or 76 I was working part time in a small gun/sporting goods store. A roughneck came in with a hard luck story about needing to get back to Texas. He wanted to sell his '64 Riviera for bus fare home. The car was halfway through an engine rebuild in his landlord's front yard. The guy's boots were held together with duct tape. I gave my boss a 16 gauge Stevens double. He gave the Texan a pair of boots and $40. I got the Buick.
 
In 1968 I was at a place buying parts foe an outboard motor. Had a 68 GTO I got from a guy who got drafted 2 weeks after buying the car. Guy asks who's GTO is that in the lot. Told him mine. He waited for me. Wanted to trade cars. He had a 63 split window coupe. Red...cherry small engine 4 speed.He offered me the vette and 600 cash for the Goat. I told him I didn't think so...and he asked if I was into guns..I said some. I made the deal for the vette 600 cash and a 4 inch Python still in the box...Didn't keep any of what I got. Traded the vette even for a 68 Chevelle 396 HI per. Car was fast...Kept the gun a few years Traded it for a pre war M-70 Win 375 H&H
 
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I traded an Armalite AR-7 for a 1970 Epiphone Sheraton.

I traded a Peavey Stereo Chorus 212 for a CPD turn in 6906.




Sounds very familiar. A lot of my additions/subtractions from the gun safe and the studio were done the same way. I figured the instruments/sound equipment paid for itself mostly through my mis-spent youth, so most of the gun collection didn't come from out of pocket. Occasionally it went the other way.
 

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