nice
nice
Last edited by ronaldrwl; 03-31-2010 at 14:10.
Grandpa's Sheriff Badge, Littleton 1920's
I'll admit I don't often consider resale when I buy a gun. I don't because I don't like selling once I have acquired; guns, tools, and books. That isn't to say I may not sell a few at some point but if I do it'll just be to thin the herd. But I buy specific guns for specific reasons. I have a habit of building what I want so I get exactly what I want, so I get something specific to do that with.
That being said, I look at the purchase of guns and tools the same way. If you're going to use it once then you're going to use it again and you should get the best you can. If you buy a cheap, crappy tool and it breaks the first time you're trying to use it, forcing you to buy another one, by the time you buy the second one you probably could have bought a good one, once. False economy costs you more than getting something higher priced and higher quality to begin with. The lowest bidder usually gets you the lowest quality.
As long as you're careful and educate yourself on the product, you tend to get what you pay for.
SI VIS PACEM, PARA BELLUM
Herding cats and favoring center
I never skimp on tools, workboots, or guns.
That said, there are some things which are just not going to be in the realm of possibility for years. Thats OK. I'm patient, but sometimes a guy has to work with the best he can afford even if its not exactly what he wants.
/arnie voice on
Between your $1500 Kimber, and my Glock nine milimeter, I take my Glock.
What Hoser said.
My 1911 path went like this:
No name 1911 (don't remember), bought new, sold at a loss
Kimber Pro Carry, bought new, sold at a loss
Kimber Warrior, bought new, sold at a loss
Colt Guvmint Model, bought used, broke even
Wilson Combat Pro, bought new built to my specs. I'll likely keep this gun forever because it's perfect for my needs and wants.
I don't remember the buy and sell prices of those items, but if you figure I lost $200-$300 one each of the new guns, I pissed away quite a lot of coin working my way up to what I really wanted.
I think the whole situation changes if you buy used guns. If you're not an idiot, you can usually get what you paid back out of a used gun when you sell it.
You guys aren't considering the value of the time you owned the gun.
If you buy a Kimber for $1,200, shoot 1,000 rounds through it a year for 3 years, you've put nearly $800 in ammo through the gun. If you sell the gun after 3 years, you're only selling at a loss of $400.
Now, nearly every good in nearly every market loses value over time, that is to be expected. You basically rented that Kimber for 3 years for $400. Did you really lose money on it? I'd say you didn't.