Just listed my 1880 Experimental Trapdoor on GunBroker. Please let me know what you all think? I hope I am being fair! Thanks!
1880 Experimental Trapdoor
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Al Frasca at trapdoorcollector.com has one in nice condition for 2650.00. That should help you with comparison pricing. -
Both rifles have problems.
Al's is much more correct as to configuration, but has condition issues - I think it is priced a bit low, but we shall see - he really knows the market, if anyone does.
The Gunbroker arm - if I have the correct one (BIN for $3995?) - has some issues that I do not understand. The breechblock is a narrow (prior to 96300) one, and of the earliest configuration with low scallop cut at right side. SA would NEVER have fitted such a block into a wide receiver. THe hammer is of correct post 1880 form (with lip) but the top has been ground and polished to make it flush with the top of the block which is incorrect. It has been fitted with a Buffington sight, but, the army did not keep them in service long enough for that to happen. The bronze firing pin is also a replacement. The BIN price is probably fair under the circumstances, but it may be a tough sell as offered. Were it mine I probably would go to the trouble of replacing the hammer, block, and rear sight - then boosting the price to what the rifle deserves, perhaps $5000.
Just my $.02 - your mileage may vary.Comment
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Whoops - wrong rifle, my bad!
That one is much nicer (though I might argue as to it being the best one left - Collectors Firearms in Houston has one that is nearly brand new, with price to match) than either discussed above - and is certainly, IMHO, worth the price asked. Yours looks to be in about the same condition as mine - 156967.
Would it be possible to provided the exact serial number? I'd like to see if I have it logged for inclusion in the table of the 1880 chapter in my upcoming book.Comment
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Also search Rock Island auction companies next auction, catalog is now on line, for trapdoor Springfield and look at that one. low estimate price and condition.Comment
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That's a VERY nice one, at least as good as the one at Collectors - and definitely better than mine. Interesting that Julia felt it necessary to spin the s/n as a possible anagram of the one on Al's list - totally superfluous BS, and probably a wrong assumption to boot. It's in the right range, what more need be said? Sad that the market has fallen so much - many of the rare items in the Branum collection, for example, went far too low last year at Cowan's, IMHO.
Joe, do I have the numbers on all three of yours?Last edited by Dick Hosmer; 05-22-2015, 06:06.Comment
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When faced with a list of what are unusual guns, and the one that you're looking at isn't on it, suspecting a transposition isn't too strange I guess. 157186 vs 157816. Two numbers transposed. It caught my eye and I watched it go. I was mildly interested but not $3K+ interested as I paid less for 157816. So the number transposition would have been amusing to have but not amusing enough to pay that market.That's a VERY nice one, at least as good as the one at Collectors - and definitely better than mine. Interesting that Julia felt it necessary to spin the s/n as a possible anagram of the one on Al's list - totally superfluous BS, and probably a wrong assumption to boot it's in the right range, what more need be said?
Ebb and flow of the market and finance. Not a bad thing if you're buying but obvious not good if your selling. I'm not really doing either right now so no big deal. I did dump some more modern stuff and some ammo and that was selling like hotcakes.Sad that the market has fallen so much - many of the rare items in the Branum collection, for example, went far too low last year at Cowan's, IMHO.
Thought you had them. 156793, 156831, and 157816. That last not being a typo.Joe, do I have the numbers on all three of yours?
What a gun is worth is what it'll get on the open market. If it doesn't get it, it wasn't worth that. If it does, it was. The market changes over time so only a sale will determine what anything is worth in that market at that time.
FWIW I bought the three in a four month span five years ago. Averaged to $2,100 per rifle. I wanted one so the gun gods smiled once again and three found me. Hard to turn strays away. 157816 came with the batch which included the BoOaF Krag. That was a nice batch.Comment
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Is what one of the .30 Springfields?
Joe was speaking of his 26" barreled Board Of Ordnance & Fortifications Krag - 1 of 100.Comment
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I have added three photos to the description of the 1880 experimental trapdoor as well as some further description. Please let me know what you all think. Mr. Hosmer, I would be happy to provide you with any information about this gun, especially if it helps you with a book. Please let me know what I can do and how to get you the info privately. Thanks!Comment
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Thanks - that is a new number to me, falling between previously recorded specimens 157632 and 157732. Nothing strikes me as special, other than the fact that it is the rare model of course - the two (P)s most likely means it was returned to SA for addition of the slide-lock. Did you know that a batch of them were offered for sale in the "American Rifleman" in 1951? Rifle, blue web belt, and a 20-rd. box of original FA ammo for . . . . . . . . . . drum roll . . . . . . . . . . $24.95 plus freight? Lest you think that was an accident - they were CORRECTLY identified (a significant statement for that period of deep ignorance, when a TD was a TD and that was it).Comment

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