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I don't collect but I really really want a Barrett M107A3 .50 cal. I don't know why and I realize its impracticality is phenomenal but I really want one for my coffee table lol!

I wish I could get one too but u couldn't be even grandfathered in if u were to find one to buy
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Sorry, must have misplaced the wording. Yes, That one is a 1911 Lee Enfield No 1 MK3 with Australian 2nd Military District markings. 102 years old and shoots great. Don't plan on shooting it very often though. .303 Brit is expensive and harder to find than other ammo. Going to start reloading though. I got the 1961 Nylon 66 fom my Aunt just a few years ago. I'm 39 and that is the gun that my Uncle taught me how to shoot with when I was 10 years old. My Uncle passed away in 2006. Found out two years ago that my Aunt still had that gun. Got it for my B Day two years ago:) Great shape and shoots like it did back then. Took my first rabbit with that gun. The Dragunov I found at a garage sale last October lol. Don't think they knew exactly what they had. Here are two pics from that garage sale. yvy4yvan.jpga6e7u2yb.jpg

Edited by Aaron1100us
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I used to collect military rifles that ranged in period from the Civil War through WWII. The only "newer" one I had was a Russian SKS. But I started selling them off a couple of years ago. I had too many and they were just collecting dust for the most part. I've still got a few though. My favorite is an M1 carbine. I call that one my fun gun. Got a few handguns but was always more of a long gun kinda guy.

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Nothing too special.

S&W .38 SPL +P J-frame airweight (my conceal carry piece)

S&W M&P 9mm 17+1

Remmington 35 Cal Lever-action built 1908

Remmington 22 LR built 1932

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I have a couple of rifles nothing too noteworthy:

Winchester lever action 30/30

Scoped 308 (Enfield I think)

Springfield 12 gauge

Couple of old 22's

My one collectors piece is a Japanese infantry matchlock circa 1650 - took this one to the Antiques Road Show and they happened to have a gun specialist from Japan there, but he could not give me an estimated value due to the fact he had never seen one before.

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I have a couple of rifles nothing too noteworthy:

Winchester lever action 30/30

Scoped 308 (Enfield I think)

Springfield 12 gauge

Couple of old 22's

My one collectors piece is a Japanese infantry matchlock circa 1650 - took this one to the Antiques Road Show and they happened to have a gun specialist from Japan there, but he could not give me an estimated value due to the fact he had never seen one before.

Your Japanese matchlock sounds cool. I would guess crafted by a single smith and perhaps one of a kind. That one I'd hang on to.

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Your Japanese matchlock sounds cool. I would guess crafted by a single smith and perhaps one of a kind. That one I'd hang on to.

I'll have to try and get a pic of it this weekend and post it. When I took it in to the Antique Road Show the guy from Japan said that it is very rare because typically the infantry arms were mostly ruined, the only ones that survived in good condition were the ones for officers because they were very ornate and hardly ever used! He disassembled it and took a rubbing of an inscription under the barrel that he believed was the makers mark... he was going to take it to a university in Japan for translation because it was written in a form of Japanese that it no longer used and he could not translate it... never heard back from him. :unsure:

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I'll have to try and get a pic of it this weekend and post it. When I took it in to the Antique Road Show the guy from Japan said that it is very rare because typically the infantry arms were mostly ruined, the only ones that survived in good condition were the ones for officers because they were very ornate and hardly ever used! He disassembled it and took a rubbing of an inscription under the barrel that he believed was the makers mark... he was going to take it to a university in Japan for translation because it was written in a form of Japanese that it no longer used and he could not translate it... never heard back from him. :unsure:

Cool stuff. History kind of talks to me through old firearms - imagining the men who crafted them and those that carried them.

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I envy you guys for having the luxury to purchase those stuff legally. Here in our place - it's a complete gun-ban. Even my license had took me into custody for some minutes of interview. tsk.

For now, but their are plenty in the 'gun control' crowd (I won't mention any political affiliation) that would love to change that, and put the U.S. citizen even further under the government boot, and thus resembling more your country. Our 2nd amendment protects the rest of them, and thus irks those who wish to diminish them, although they try to chip away at them at every opportunity. Without it, the rest are simply words.

"Guard with jealous attention the public liberty. Suspect every one who approaches that jewel. Unfortunately, nothing will preserve it but downright force. Whenever you give up that force, you are inevitably ruined"

Patrick Henry

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