Author Topic: 94 in Win .375 value...  (Read 482 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline bullethead

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Member
  • *
  • Posts: 7
94 in Win .375 value...
« on: July 19, 2004, 05:52:53 PM »
I took a bolt action gun down to a gunsmith I just made contact with and was looking around his store for old high walls, mausers, and the such.  He had a handful of old top ejecting Winchesters.  I am interested in one that is in great condition, chambered in .375 win.  If I remember right the front barrel band was gold.

I have been wanting to get an old top ejecting winchester in something none 30-30.  I will use it for only "fun" deer hunts in close quarters.

What am I looking at as far as age of this rifle and street value?  The tag read 500 bones...

Thx

Offline leverfan

  • Trade Count: (8)
  • A Real Regular
  • ****
  • Posts: 823
94 in Win .375 value...
« Reply #1 on: July 20, 2004, 08:22:27 PM »
The Blue Book of Gun Values can serve as a starting point, but you may want to ask other gun dealers in your area, if you know of any that you can trust for a fair guess as to value.  A rifle's value can be very different, depending on the local collectors' market, and favored methods of hunting in your area.  If it's still on the dealer's shelf in a couple of weeks, it isn't worth as much as he'd hoped, because nobody is paying that much for it.  Then again, it might be gone, like the 375 H&H I should have snapped up a few months ago.  If you really want that rifle, and you have the means, haggle a little, but go ahead and get it.  You'll forget the price in a couple of months, and the 375 Winchester is a good lever gun round.  It'll handle a lot more than just deer at close quarters, with the right bullet and load.

In my local gunshop, the owner told me that he can't get much more for a .375 Winchester than he can for a .30-30, but what you described may be a collectable rifle, or more popular in your neck of the woods.
NRA life member