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Ragnarok
02-28-2013, 03:40 PM
I'll describe as best I can a .38-40 1873 rifle offered for sale to me

It's serial number dates it to 1889..it's complete dust-cover and all...sort of rough..intact but rough. Probably near 100% patina...bore is about used up...has had a dent peckered out of the mag-tube..wood is intact and tight enough. Would probably shoot..however may not have enough bore to be accurate.

Was first offered to me sometime back for $2000!!...Now it's make an offer...I don't need a wall-hanger or a project-gun...How much are haggared .38-40 Winchester 1873 rifles worth in the real world??

I'll Make Mine
02-28-2013, 06:55 PM
What's it worth to you? Now, deduct the cost of having it rebarrelled or relined and gone over by a competent gunsmith, and offer 25% less than that (to leave room for a little haggling).

For myself, I have little to no interest in collectibles; if I buy a rifle, I plan to shoot it. I'd consider a tired old .38-40 to be worth $300 to $500 as a shooter, and it'd cost almost that to get the barrel in good enough shape to hit anything with it, so I'd just walk away. Your mileage may vary, of course...

Mike Brooks
02-28-2013, 07:06 PM
I agree.
This is no collector piece and only good for parts or a candidate for a liner. I doubt I'd give more than $500. But, I have never cared much for pistol caliber rifles anyway.

fouronesix
02-28-2013, 10:55 PM
Some decent photos would help but may not be possible. Judging by your description- I'd just walk away. The going rate for a decent original 73 starts at about 2K and goes up according to condition. Nothing but trouble and buyer's remorse with this one, so says the crystal ball.

missionary5155
03-01-2013, 03:41 AM
Good morning
For that kind of "asking price" it would have to be a lettered, special order, with finish, good bore and not rust covered 73.
You can but a Cimmaron or Uberti for half that and happily go through your whole life shooting thousands of rounds.
Mike in Peru

JIMinPHX
03-01-2013, 07:44 AM
I'd probably offer $2-300 if I was looking for a project gun, but I tend to be a bit cheap. I don't get all the things that I bid on.

You might be surprised how well you can sometimes get a "worn out" barrel to shoot, especially with older low-pressure cartridges. I believe that max pressure on that one is only 14k cup.

Ragnarok
03-01-2013, 09:23 AM
I think the fellow is having a medical issue...wants to peddle the gun a bit worse than he did when he offered it to me for 2 grand.

I probably should at least make an offer...and who knows?...Maybe $500 would liberate the gun...I would give $500 for it and save it for a future project

TXBRILL
03-01-2013, 01:09 PM
I recently bought the same vintage 1873 in 38-40 for 500.00, it showed no grooves in the bore at all, I patiently cleaned it every day for about 2 weeks using all the home formula's for lead removal and sure enough it was just all fouled with lead.

Speedo66
03-01-2013, 08:35 PM
A good stock and fore end with no metal will bring $350-400 on Ebay, plus the internal parts also go high. If you decide it's not a shooter, you would have no trouble getting your money back if bought at a reasonable price.

They'll still shoot decently even with minimal rifling, and they are a piece of history, i.e., Winchester's first "central fire" rifle. And we all know how good the Indians did with them against Custer's single shot trapdoors.

runfiverun
03-01-2013, 08:43 PM
unless the internals are trashed, a re-bore to 44-40 would at least make it a decent shooter. [worst case]
you still would have just that, a low pressure shooter.
but it could alway's be re-lined to the 38-40 later.

Ragnarok
03-02-2013, 11:34 AM
Don't think I got it bought...but that's still up in the air..I put in an offer of $600 and we'll just have to see..