Recoil Rob
Member
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2010
- Messages
- 244
- Reaction score
- 129
I can understand older guns occasionally having the wrong numbered stock on them but it seems to me that a lot of high condition guns have stocks numbered to another gun. You would think that someone that bought a gun 50 years ago and took the trouble to keep the gun in high condition would have kept the correct stocks. Even if they were a target shooter and used aftermarket target stocks the originals would have been kept in the box.
But it seems that an inordinate amount of nice guns have the wrong stocks. Right now on one of the auctions there's a very nice K-38 from 1954, high condition, original box and sales receipt, wrong stocks. I myself have purchased a few guns at discount because even though they were 95%+ guns, they had the wrong stocks.
Just curious as to why so many go missing, it's as if guys went to gun clubs to shoot and before a match threw all their stocks in a bin and then took home whatever came out. Most high condition guns look as though a screw was never turned so I doubt the stock got exchanged at a gunsmiths.
What do you think?
BTW, what about a sticky thread listing mismatched stocks and extras we have to try and reunite them with the correct gun?
But it seems that an inordinate amount of nice guns have the wrong stocks. Right now on one of the auctions there's a very nice K-38 from 1954, high condition, original box and sales receipt, wrong stocks. I myself have purchased a few guns at discount because even though they were 95%+ guns, they had the wrong stocks.
Just curious as to why so many go missing, it's as if guys went to gun clubs to shoot and before a match threw all their stocks in a bin and then took home whatever came out. Most high condition guns look as though a screw was never turned so I doubt the stock got exchanged at a gunsmiths.
What do you think?
BTW, what about a sticky thread listing mismatched stocks and extras we have to try and reunite them with the correct gun?