Stock is in good shape no cracks just the blueing that’s the pits literallyI would say this rifle is a perfect rifle for a restoration. It has lost its collector value due to condition but if sent to someone that is reputable for a restock and blueing it would once again have value to many others
Shot it today shoots like a champYes, perfect candidate for a re blue as long as the rifling and action are good
I’d actually disagree with this statement. A Pre64 458WM is vastly different than a Pre64 270 or 3006 that can be found most days checking a couple of different LGS that deal in a lot of used guns.I would say this rifle is a perfect rifle for a restoration. It has lost its collector value due to condition but if sent to someone that is reputable for a restock and blueing it would once again have value to many others
Great reply from a knowledgeable Winchester collector. I would leave it as is. Far too many vintage guns are refinished.I’d actually disagree with this statement. A Pre64 458WM is vastly different than a Pre64 270 or 3006 that can be found most days checking a couple of different LGS that deal in a lot of used guns.
Due to the low number of Pre64 African Super Grades made (56-63) this gun has value regardless of the condition. As long as it maintains the original finish, you’ll maintain some value. In 60% condition the guns worth $3k or more. The better the condition the higher the value goes. Once you refinish this gun you’ll loose that $3k value (@60%) and don’t gain anything by it being in better condition. There are plenty of collectors who buy 60-80% condition guns to fill a hole in their collection, while looking to upgrade them down the road.
My personal opinion is keep it as is, hunt with and enjoy it. You’ll maintain at least the present value due to the very finite number made, since they get fewer and fewer each year when people try to restore them.
Stock is in good shape no cracks just the blueing that’s the pits literally
I agree to disagree lol I too have a whole wall of Winchesters and have been collecting for over 30 years. Does this make me the authority? No! And your opinion is as valuable as mine for sure…I’d actually disagree with this statement. A Pre64 458WM is vastly different than a Pre64 270 or 3006 that can be found most days checking a couple of different LGS that deal in a lot of used guns.
Due to the low number of Pre64 African Super Grades made (56-63) this gun has value regardless of the condition. As long as it maintains the original finish, you’ll maintain some value. In 60% condition the guns worth $3k or more. The better the condition the higher the value goes. Once you refinish this gun you’ll loose that $3k value (@60%) and don’t gain anything by it being in better condition. There are plenty of collectors who buy 60-80% condition guns to fill a hole in their collection, while looking to upgrade them down the road.
My personal opinion is keep it as is, hunt with and enjoy it. You’ll maintain at least the present value due to the very finite number made, since they get fewer and fewer each year when people try to restore them.
Very interesting comment, please expand on it? (I have 458 African that was reblued, but is otherwise in very good shape).I agree to disagree lol I too have a whole wall of Winchesters and have been collecting for over 30 years. Does this make me the authority? No! And your opinion is as valuable as mine for sure…
Buuuut! That rifle in mint grade to very good grade will bring between $10,000 and $12,000 for sale or auction…
That rifle in good to average grade will bring between $6,000 to $8,000 for sale or auction…
That rifle in the condition it is, with pitted and worn bluing, along with a handled and dinged stock falls in the below average to poor category and is in the $3,000 range and won’t bring more…
Now saying that it’s a diamond in the rough!!!
Seriously! You send that to the likes of a LeRoy Berry to restore and restock the value will jump to $15,000 to $20,000 depending on the level of finish!
So to the OP yes reblue if you want because even if reblued it will still bring the same money as it is in the current condition!
But if you were to really go all out and sink $10k into it you’d probably double your money on it at auction or sale as long as the rebuild was from a well known and reputable custom rifle and stock maker…
I would like to see a restored .458 bring $15-20kI agree to disagree lol I too have a whole wall of Winchesters and have been collecting for over 30 years. Does this make me the authority? No! And your opinion is as valuable as mine for sure…
Buuuut! That rifle in mint grade to very good grade will bring between $10,000 and $12,000 for sale or auction…
That rifle in good to average grade will bring between $6,000 to $8,000 for sale or auction…
That rifle in the condition it is, with pitted and worn bluing, along with a handled and dinged stock falls in the below average to poor category and is in the $3,000 range and won’t bring more…
Now saying that it’s a diamond in the rough!!!
Seriously! You send that to the likes of a LeRoy Berry to restore and restock the value will jump to $15,000 to $20,000 depending on the level of finish!
So to the OP yes reblue if you want because even if reblued it will still bring the same money as it is in the current condition!
But if you were to really go all out and sink $10k into it you’d probably double your money on it at auction or sale as long as the rebuild was from a well known and reputable custom rifle and stock maker…
I am in your camp on this. Scarcity/originality is the driver of value on the super grade .458s. I think the value of a completely refinished/restocked pre-64 (from Berry etc.) is not significantly higher than a later G series action or pre-64 born in another chambering.I would like to see a restored .458 bring $15-20k
Because I’ve seen a couple of .458 pre 64’s go to auction in the last couple of years, that were expertly restored and both failed to break $6K at auction….. and god knows what the restoration bill was.
I’m not saying I’m the authority but I’ll agree to disagree.I agree to disagree lol I too have a whole wall of Winchesters and have been collecting for over 30 years. Does this make me the authority? No! And your opinion is as valuable as mine for sure…
Buuuut! That rifle in mint grade to very good grade will bring between $10,000 and $12,000 for sale or auction…
That rifle in good to average grade will bring between $6,000 to $8,000 for sale or auction…
That rifle in the condition it is, with pitted and worn bluing, along with a handled and dinged stock falls in the below average to poor category and is in the $3,000 range and won’t bring more…
Now saying that it’s a diamond in the rough!!!
Seriously! You send that to the likes of a LeRoy Berry to restore and restock the value will jump to $15,000 to $20,000 depending on the level of finish!
So to the OP yes reblue if you want because even if reblued it will still bring the same money as it is in the current condition!
But if you were to really go all out and sink $10k into it you’d probably double your money on it at auction or sale as long as the rebuild was from a well known and reputable custom rifle and stock maker…
This is the exact reason they’re worth what they’re worth in poor condition and why I’d leave it.How much has OP got in his rifle? Does he intend to hunt with it or resell? I'm not into collecting or gun running so I wouldn't hesitate to reblue the metal and refinish the stock if I intended to hunt with it (but 458 is more gun than I'll ever want for hunting).