Uechi wrote on May 22
nd, 2012 at 8:05pm:
I understand that when you sell a rifle you want to ,at a minimum, make a profit but why not say that the rifle has a crappy bore if it does.
Unfortunately, "crappy bore" is even more undescriptive than a 1 to 10 system. And, what it means to you is maybe not what it means to me. Most of these guns are 100 years old, or more. What one guy would consider garbage, another is quite pleased to have. I have a Fields patent .450 express rifle that has what I would definitely think you would call a crappy bore. I would give it a 4 out of 10, maybe a 3. It is one of my favorite rifles, and gets shot regularly all summer. It shoots under 2 inches at 30 yards, where the sights are regulated to. It takes many patches to get the bore even resembling clean, and it has large pits (straight-pin head size) throughout the bore, with the muzzle much worse and the crown pretty pitted and irregular. If this was a highwall, I'd spin out the barrel and rebarrel the rifle without even ever putting a shell into it. In the context of an original and hard to get english falling block, I'm very pleased to be able to shoot it.
Many times it's not about making money on a gun, it's about trying to describe it accurately, so that the buyer gets a gun in the condition that he expected. Buyers are optimists. I've described guns as being poor bore, needing rebarreled. The buyer gets it, and writes that they're pleased with the rifle, but disappointed because they had hoped to be able to shoot it as is. I had one buyer that I sold a german schuetzen rechambered to, of all things, .32 special, return it because it wasn't in a 8.1 x something rimmed. I told him that I had clearly disclosed it was in .32 special, and he said that he knew much more about these than I, and they didn't come in .32 special, so he was sure I was wrong until he checked himself.
dave