Bassbob
Emissary
I got a guy trying to sell me this. Any guesses what I should offer him for it ?
Yes I was thinking $300 on the outside if it is in good mechanical conditionRight.
If it’s a Victory, it should have “US PROPERTY” on the top strap above the left hand side of the cylinder.
Unless it’s in .38 S&W (not .38 S&W Special—can’t make out the barrel markings)—that would make it a Lend-Lease gun to England.
Either way…the finish is not original (should be parkerized); the markings in the barrel are faint, so it’s been polished (probably to remove pitting) and then reblued…and perhaps the picture doesn’t do it justice, but it doesn’t look like a particularly good job.
Grips are (obviously) not correct; should be smooth wood. The lanyard ring is also missing.
If it’s good mechanically, it should be a solid shooter…it’s what became the Model 10 in the ‘50’s. If that’s the case, I’d give $300 for it.
I’ll see if I can find pictures of the VM I picked up 10 years or so ago; paid $300 then, but it was original finish.
I’d do that.I knew the grips weren’t original, though these grips seem to be on a hell of a lot of these guns. It does have a V in the serial number. I haven’t seen it in person.
My thoughts were to offer $300 for this gun and this gun
It’s a Hawes Derringer in .357
My research suggests the derringer is worth $150. So that would have me paying $200 for the Smith and $100 for the derringer.
That sound like a good deal ?
Better check, but I believe Ermas had alloy frames or at least the one I had did. Seems I had a problem with it feeding properly. Sat in a box with other junk for years until I traded it. The Interarms .22 was better made as I remember, but remembering for me is sometimes problematic!The guy also has an Italian repro Colt Army in a presentation case. Kinda beat up. And a Raven P25. Neither of which interests me.
Oh and he has a Erma .22 pistol. Looks kinda like a Luger and has about a 14” barrel. He seems to think that one is worth something. Again I’m not interested.
It is a Victory. V in the serial. No Property of US on it anywhere. I’ll take it for $200 if it times up and is mechanically sound. The .357 Derringer for $100 is the real deal. F that Raven. It’s only good if you’re a cop and need a throwaway. Ah but those days are long gone, right ?If it is a Victory, the serial number will begin with "V". But this one has been poorly refinished and has the wrong grips. Any collector value is gone. Its only value is as a shooter and that's only if it checks out mechanically. I'd guess $300 would be fair. But honestly, I'd pass.
The Erma .22 Lugers do have quite a following. Depending on price, you might flip that for a decent profit. But the long barrel wouldn't appeal to me.
The real find in this group is the Raven P25. Yep, cheap, junky, Saturday night special. But the darn things are completely reliable. Never malfunction and go bang every single time. That one I'd buy for $50 or less.
for 300-400 I would jump on both but again I'm so far out of the loop...I knew the grips weren’t original, though these grips seem to be on a hell of a lot of these guns. It does have a V in the serial number. I haven’t seen it in person.
My thoughts were to offer $300 for this gun and this gun
It’s a Hawes Derringer in .357
My research suggests the derringer is worth $150. So that would have me paying $200 for the Smith and $100 for the derringer.
That sound like a good deal ?
Hawes was a firearms importer during the 1960s. Most of their guns were actually made by J.P.Sauer and Sohn in Germany. They were good guns. They pretty much specialized in old west type firearms. Specifically, clones of the SAA. The gun James Arness carried in Gunsmoke was a Hawes Western Marshall.I have never heard of Hawes