Rarity is a 2 edged sword. There needs to be enough of them to create a demand. But few enough, that the guys that want them for their collection will compete for them. Also, needs to be a way to identify the item easily, and a book to document the item so that collectors know they have to have it. Ballards went up almost double when Dutchers book came out. Same for the recent Rolling Block book and sporter rifles. Numbered glassware sells for many times what unnumbered examples from the same maker does. It gives collectors a way to identify it, and know they need it for their collection. For something like this, I would absolutely love to have it myself. Condition is beautiful. But, the .32 shot would make it only a curio, not usable. So, the demand is only for collectors that don't shoot it. I would soon tire of it, and pass it on. Not so with the ones I can shoot. A good .22 rimfire in lesser condition will bring more money, as the demand pool is much larger; most gun owners want the ability to shoot their collection, if they ever get that compulsion. Many never shoot them, but acquire cartridges so that they can. As James Grant said, (paraphrasing) "Collectors are an odd lot". On these boys rifles, a huge part of the demand is from guys that owned one when they were a kid and don't now, or that coveted one and didn't own it. Now, as they enter their second childhood, they are very willing to pay top dollar to fulfill the deficiencies of their first childhood. And, they want beautiful pristine examples, not the version that they had left after a few hard years of neglect. The formula for value and rarity is simple: Winchester + Scaricity = Big $. Not necessarily true for anything else. Unknown maker + Scarcity = Yawn dave
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