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Value of rifle needed

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Please share your thoughts onn what this rifle is worth. I'm a little ignorant with rifles, but this one is a good shooter so I'm interested in making this my son's deer hunting rifle.

 

* older 257 roberts that hasn't been shot for about 15 years until a few weeks ago.

* douglas barrel (approx 1000 shots)

* glass bedded

* wood stock in very good condition

* springfield action with no safety

 

My dad shot this gun 8 times a few weeks ago and said it shot nearly 1/2 moa with factory ammo. What would you consider the value of this rifle? Any additional questions I should ask? Thanks for any input.

 

Wade

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It's basically worth whatever you are willing to pay for it. As the previous poster said, without pictures any estimate is a WAG. At a minimum, you should have it checked by a competent gunsmith and, if you buy it, have an aftermarket safety installed. I suspect that the original safety wouldn't clear a scope and the owner decided against the added expense of doing it right. That, alone, would definitely prod me to have a gunsmith look at it before you commit, as there may have been other "money-saving" shortcuts by the builder that aren't readily apparent. I have had a couple of custom rifles built on Springfield '03 actions with Douglas barrels and they were very nice rifles. However, they were a little bigger and heavier than I would have used to start either of my daughters or any of my grand kids. JMHO.

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ok - this is a good start. Thanks for the replies. I'd never heard of a springfield action and the ones online look outdated so I hoped it wouldn't be some rare action that demanded a thousand dollars. My boy is 16 and currently shoots around 500 shots / year from his rifles. He goes shooting with his friends, but I would add a safety to it before sending it with him. I assume this rifle would double his shooting and force me into reloading asap! He's limited to me buying ammo at $45/box. I like the sound of $300.

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Perhaps $250, or maybe less, depending upon the design and workmanship of the stock and whether anything was done to slim and shape the triggerguard. There were a lot of Bubba-worked Springfields after the DCM sold them for virtually nothing years ago.

 

Bill Quimby

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I assume this rifle would double his shooting and force me into reloading asap! He's limited to me buying ammo at $45/box. I

Worse things could happen to you (and to him). Reloading is a relaxing, enjoyable and productive hobby!

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At $45 a box, you can gather some reloading equipment and save money fast. Plus the 257 Roberts is an awesome cartridge that is way better with reloads than factory ammo. I can't imagine not reloading rifle cartridges with today's prices on factory ammo.

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The .257 Roberts definitely is a fine caliber. I had two of them until burglars took them away. I shot several Coues and Texas Hill Country whitetails, a Wyoming angelope, and a couple of javelinas with them, as well as a Himalayan tahr, a chamois and maybe three dozen feral goats on a cull in New Zealand. I don't remember anything needing a second shot. --- Bill Quimby

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Better get an idea on what the safety will entail and cost. You can get a Tikka T3 for mid $500's that will be new, complete, and a shooter. Others In that range too. Makes little sense to be $450 or 500 (once safety work Is done) into a Springfield when you can get a quality new rifle for not a lot more. Just my two cents worth.

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Better get an idea on what the safety will entail and cost. You can get a Tikka T3 for mid $500's that will be new, complete, and a shooter. Others In that range too. Makes little sense to be $450 or 500 (once safety work Is done) into a Springfield when you can get a quality new rifle for not a lot more. Just my two cents worth.

Believe me, I've tried. I've been 2nd or later in line on nearly a dozen rifles in the past 6 months. Just missed a tikka 204 ruger on LRH today!

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Well ... all I'm saying is if that rifle costs you $450 once you get the safety worked out, what you've got is an old action with a barrel at 1000 rounds. For another $125-150 you could have a new rifle that is at ZERO rounds. Sure ... you have to put some glass on it, but I didn't see where the Springfield is coming with glass.

 

Another thing about that is you have some caliber choice. I don't have anything against a Roberts ... fine round with a great history. But the bottom line is that there are a lot of viable rounds out there that are more commercially available in case you had to pop in somewhere and grab a box. Rounds like the .243, .260, 7-08, .308 to name a few. Hand loading is great ... but if you need some quick ammo in a pinch, it's nice to know the local Wally World carries what you need.

 

The .204 wasn't for deer, was it??? Little on the small side. If you are looking for a .204 for varmint I have one that I am not actively trying to sell, but some guys have inquired and I've decided I'd part with it under the right circumstances. PM me if interested and we can discuss it.

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Google it...minute of angle...you could read about it until your eyes bleed...

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Most posters don't know what MOA is either. When they say 1/4 MOA for all practical purposes it means 1/4" group at 100 yards.

 

But, as Jack O'Connor said "you have to take a little salt with the figures". I think that if I can hit My Old Asprin bottle at 100yds. its all good. :)

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