In for sale, a member has a fairly nice low wall with excellent barrel that has been tapped for scope blocks. Comment that too bad was tapped, several others say it adds value to the rifle. Apparently, from the lack of sale, it hasn't; the rifle unaltered would bring maybe $1600, he's asking $1700 with holes, and it hasn't sold. I'd guess it'll have to discount $150 or so to sell because of holes. I have never seen that add value, no matter to whom. Every "shooter" that I have seen taking a collectible original that has been damaged by holes has said "I don't care that it's been drilled, because I want to shoot it and that saves me money". I've never seen one say "Wow, that one has holes in it, I'll pay $50 more per hole for it over undamaged collectible value". The owner that drilled that barrel decided to prioritize usefulness over value, probably recognized it was costing them, but made the rifle better for their use. It may have been when the rifle wasn't particularly collectible and valuable, so the loss at that time may have been minimal. Rarity that cannot be duplicated or created makes for value. Once tapped, that is one less original rifle that is available, and the value of the undamaged ones goes up. You can always take an undamaged one and convert it to a drilled one, so no extra value to a drilled one. I've taken apart and rebuilt collectible rifles, knowing I'm destroying the collectible value. But, that makes more sense than working with something poor. I've offered on here several times to trade an original rifle that I was going to break down for a new action, quality barrel, and a new semi-inletted stock set. Never had a taker. The reality for a gun builder is that starting with a nice 75% condition rifle is much more cost effective than putting in the labor to start with a worn to hell relic original. Just a quick re-polish and re-finish on the 75% one, many hours or even days of labor to rebuild a junker. Same with the guy that has a rifle, wants to shoot it, but needs scope for his eyes. He could sell his rifle, buy back one already tapped, and shoot it. But, he's taking a chance on bore being good, on action working, etc. Plus having to work up loads for it. Better to just drill his rifle and use it instead of going to a lot of bother to find that he doesn't end up with a usable rifle anyway. So, even if he loses value, he's ahead. Thought I'd bring it up here to discuss. I'll post some examples below.
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