I'm taking a poll to help me make a decision.
Is an old Beeman R (Weihrauch) worth more with OE parts or tune kits installed?
Is an old Beeman R (Weihrauch) worth more with OE parts or tune kits installed?
I'd pay more if it had fresh lube, a new seal, and tune kit installed. I'm a user, not a collector.I'm taking a poll to help me make a decision.
Is an old Beeman R (Weihrauch) worth more with OE parts or tune kits installed?
Definitely worth more with new componentsI'm taking a poll to help me make a decision.
Is an old Beeman R (Weihrauch) worth more with OE parts or tune kits installed?
Let's say desirable but not super rare by any means. It'd be functional either way but as Kurt (SG) noted it functions nicer with a kit in it. Labor is irrelevant so I don't know if it would be worth giving away a fresh kit if it doesn't add value. Forget it if it detracts value.Can't speak to Beeman brand but anything found, gifted or inherited, I'd try to determine value first. (Series of photos on forum would be a start.) Value of a rare, one-of-a-kind airgun can suffer by modification or aggressive cleaning. On the other hand, a simple airgun, produced in large numbers, might only hold value as a functioning product, where modifications, or upgrades, won't affect value. WM
I think it depends on ones intention. If they are going to shoot it, kit for sure. If they are going to just hold on to it as a collector maybe original. I agree with Kirk, the old parts would be of no value to me.I'm taking a poll to help me make a decision.
Is an old Beeman R (Weihrauch) worth more with OE parts or tune kits installed?
This is what I'm up against. It would be my work but I'm a "Who?" to most everyone.but then their is a question of who did the work ? then there is the "i did the work myself "
Who ???
Not corny at all. Totally understandable. Similarly I'm struggling with removing the Blue Ribbon scope on my NTM (new to me) Hw77 MkI because together it's a classic Beeman airgun time capsule on the wall. On the other hand I hate the scopes design so it ruins shooting the rifle. Sure i can take it off but once it's off it's probably not going back on unless I sell the rifle. Even then the scope is probably worth more separated than packaged with the rifle. And (to everyone) the 77 isn't for sale.Hy-Score spring piston target pistol gifted many years ago by retired missionary. Not alot of these around, especially in chrome with ivory-colored grips. Still works and occasionally use, but no heavy cleaning nor modifications. Corny, but like to think I'm preserving a small piece of airgun history. WMView attachment 543274
Thanks Dave, noted. Anything is possible. I get it. The more times you have something apart the greater the possibility of incidental damage. Happens to the best of us.From being a member of this forum for a short while and seeing your postings, you seem to know your way around them pretty well and the gun would no doubt be better and worth more after your tune. That being said, there’s always a chance (however slim) you might damage the stock, internals, or metalwork finish that could possibly make it less attractive to a buyer or at least cause you more work. (Yes, I’m sure it’d be fixed properly, in any case!) Just a thought.
If they want a new kit in it, give them the new kit price. Otherwise, the as is prceLet's say desirable but not super rare by any means. It'd be functional either way, but as Kurt (SG) noted it functions nicer with a kit in it. Labor is irrelevant so I don't know if it would be worth giving away a fresh kit if it doesn't add value. Forget it if it detracts value.
thanks for your input
Ron