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...you got some examples of these brands that are cheap and high quality? I'd love to get my hands on a quality old side by side.But they cost very little
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...you got some examples of these brands that are cheap and high quality? I'd love to get my hands on a quality old side by side.But they cost very little
Sorry I had it confused with another one. As I recall it was a double rifle (not sure if both barrels were same caliber). It was 9.5x47R or something like that. Out of production for a long time. I don't buy wall hangers otherwise that thing would be on my wall right now ha ha! The metalwork, design, detail and time to make it is crazy to me.10 gauge? I just picked up 31 OLD brass 10 gauge shells at estate sale and sold them to a vendor at the OAC show.
Me neither. Gotta be able to shoot it.Sorry I had it confused with another one. As I recall it was a double rifle (not sure if both barrels were same caliber). It was 9.5x47R or something like that. Out of production for a long time. I don't buy wall hangers otherwise that thing would be on my wall right now ha ha! The metalwork, design, detail and time to make it is crazy to me.
Sauer pre war are some of the best shotguns ever made....you got some examples of these brands that are cheap and high quality? I'd love to get my hands on a quality old side by side.
If you're considering a 9mm 1911, get a Hi-Power.. they actually work.At what point would you consider a gun to be "high end"? It's price? Level of quality regardless of price? Exclusivity, such as a run of 500 units only? Maybe it's tiers within a manufacturer such as the difference between a Springfield garrison 1911 and their TRP 1911...
I know $1000 isn't very high on the price tier for a 1911 but it's VERY high on the price for a polymer 9.
Just food for thought
It is one of those terms that is VERY subjective. A lot of course is the money the person has to spend. For some a gun that costs close to 1K may be all but out of reach and to them would be high end. While others spend that on a gun they planed to have as a gun to keep in the truck and such. I have brought this up many time when guns like High Point come up. While I do not own one if I was in a spot where cash was tight and I had no gun for home? I would of course be glad to have one of them. If someone is living hand to mouth and wants a gun that may be all they can really lay hands on right then. To them a LOT of my guns would seem "high end".I don't know that I'm looking for anything high end or anything in particular. I just see the phrase tossed around a lot but it seems to have very little meaning, or no specific standard at all.
Did someone say "Hi-Point"?It is one of those terms that is VERY subjective. A lot of course is the money the person has to spend. For some a gun that costs close to 1K may be all but out of reach and to them would be high end. While others spend that on a gun they planed to have as a gun to keep in the truck and such. I have brought this up many time when guns like High Point come up. While I do not own one if I was in a spot where cash was tight and I had no gun for home? I would of course be glad to have one of them. If someone is living hand to mouth and wants a gun that may be all they can really lay hands on right then. To them a LOT of my guns would seem "high end".
That's because "high quality" is subjective and differs from consumer to consumer.I don't know that I'm looking for anything high end or anything in particular. I just see the phrase tossed around a lot but it seems to have very little meaning, or no specific standard at all.
I question why so many "high end" guns get listed after such little use.If it's posted in the classifieds.