Ontario Hunter
AH legend
Thanks. I'll never get into gun trading but that information was an eye opener. Trafficking in collectible guns is clearly more complicated than I ever imagined. Interesting. Never heard of "NRA Modern" till now.Not everyone is into gun lingo, but its worth throwing out some lingo that every buyer and seller should know and use to avoid misunderstandings. These words were not used so I'm not critiquing buyer nor seller, but consider this:
Mint - Never ever use this word. It means never handled, 100% condition as-new. All papers, boxes, handtags, etc. A brand new gun at cabelas in Remington 700 is 100% condition. When the box is opened, put on the sales floor, and sold, it becomes 98% condition which is the highest value in the price book.
NRA Antique - Poor, Fair, Good, Very Good, Fine, Excellent. (60% through 90% plus condition) These terms are defined and there are case study examples in the price books. These terms are used for guns deemed antiques by age. NRA Antique Excellent is roughly NRA Modern Good condition. You can imagine why you need to use very clear definitions and understand what those mean because 100 year old guns and 1 year old guns are scored by a different system.
NRA Modern - As mentioned, the price book stops at 98% condition. If you hunted your gun VERY carefully your gun is not NRA Modern 98%. It's probably 95%-97% condition best case. You have to be careful with this because the value of NRA modern 90% condition versus 99% condition is usually FIFTY PERCENT of book value. Words mean a lot and they need to match pictures.
Checked by a smith = A well known specialty gunsmith has declared the gun mechanically sound. Triggers, Ejectors, Bores are sound and safe for use. The stock has been inspected for latent defects. A drop test has been performed to ensure the sears do not fire if jarred. Safety works. The gun feeds and extracts some cartridge or dummy round (but maybe not yours!). Mechanically sound does not indicate a condition per se, it could be 70% condition and still be mechanically sound, it could be a 99% condition Sabatti new in box that is not mechanically sound.
New - See mint above. Don't use this word without disclaimers and parameters. If you're the first owner, it isn't new. It may be near-new and you can explain how little you handled and touched it while also defining what boxes and papers still remain.
Regulated - It means nothing without a target and load. Don't say it without supporting evidence, what you think is acceptable regulation is not the same as me or any other seller/buyer. Your near new, never fired gun regulated from the factory for Hornady DGS loads may not in fact be "well regulated" at all. Post a target and a load to demonstrate what it is, do not simply say "its good/excellent/perfect".
Disclose what work you have done or had done to the gun. Its totally acceptable to most guns to alter them, usually for the better. Give the buyer a chance to understand what the factory has done, versus what a slob smith has done, versus what a best-in-the-world smith has done that is better than factory. (e.g. an upgrade by JJ Peridoux is likely better than factory services)
Declare the inspection period. Custom is 3 days and non-firing. That means you have 3 days to return the gun to the seller, not three days to think about returning the gun. Tracking number to the seller in <3 days IS required. Non-firing inspection is the norm. If you buy a gun and opt to shoot it and it blows up in those three days, the onus is that it is 100% the buyer's fault. No seller can determine what load was used to blow up the gun so they can't be to blame. Thus, its pretty important to ask what load was used and then ask if you can use that exact load in a firing 3-day inspection period. A seller may or may not agree to that term so you must discuss that before purchase. Buyers blow up guns with negligence a lot more often than sellers deceive by selling unsafe guns. A member on this forum negligently destroyed a $30,000 double rifle because he was reckless and impulsive, putting a 106 foot-pound load into a gun that deserved a 58 foot-pound load. While both loads were SAAMI spec, it was a vintage gun made for only the former. 100% buyer's fault and he's lucky he's alive, but sadly he left the forum rather than taking the shame of openly discussing his bad choices and how he disregarded sound advice.
That's it. Just use definable words so you don't speak past one another. Don't make up definitions or you'll cause heartache.