Colt Diamondback 22 Purchase
loadedround
August 4, 2007, 07:28 PM
Guys, I need your opinion. Is 1200.00 to much to pay for a 22 lr Diamondback , blued with a 4" barrel. This revolver is almost new and rates 98-99%. Has a few very minor handling marks...could possibly be unfired. Help?
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1 old 0311
August 4, 2007, 07:33 PM
Do they want to kiss you also? Blue Book lists one in 100% condition at $850.00. In 98% condition it's $675.00. RUN FOREST RUN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Ozark Tracker
August 4, 2007, 07:45 PM
sounds the same Diamond back I saw at a gun show in Ft. Smith Arkansas today, the guy there was asking $1200 also. everybody looking at it just shook their head. no takers
El Tejon
August 4, 2007, 07:52 PM
Snakes alive, my Diamondbacks are suddenly worth something!:uhoh:
Peter M. Eick
August 4, 2007, 08:03 PM
I just looked at a very nice one for 1100$ that is essentially identical to what you describe. I would say it is worth it.
Ala Dan
August 4, 2007, 08:32 PM
May be worth $1200; but I'd offer '$900 and see what happens~?:scrutiny::eek:
The Lone Haranguer
August 4, 2007, 08:33 PM
I've seen some pretty high prices being asked (not necessarily gotten) for Diamondbacks, but that's awfully high, even for the rarer .22 model.
Make a more reasonable offer (say, the $850 mentioned) and see if he at least nibbles on it.
larry starling
August 4, 2007, 08:37 PM
I would pay that if it was the less common 2 1/2 inch one. But I recently picked up a nice blue one for $600....I would pass.:rolleyes:
22-rimfire
August 4, 2007, 09:25 PM
Seems just a bit high for a 98% 22 Diamondback. Yeah, I'd like to find a 2.5" for that price. It would still hurt, but it would be a bargain in today's market.
Standing Wolf
August 4, 2007, 09:53 PM
Diamondback prices, like those of Pythons, are outrageously high; Diamondbacks are also fine, fine revolvers.
Just Jim
August 4, 2007, 10:25 PM
Geez I have been wondering what my new in the box Diamondback 22 is worth
jj
koja48
August 4, 2007, 11:13 PM
I want one, but wouldn't pay that.
GUNKWAZY
August 5, 2007, 08:35 AM
http://gunbroker.com/Auction/ViewItem.asp?Item=71311167
http://gunbroker.com/Auction/ViewItem.asp?Item=73897671
Try that on for size... and pricing
Jeff (GUNKWAZY)
koja48
August 5, 2007, 12:25 PM
Reckon I'll just keep wanting . . . actually had one, but gave it to my oldest Son.
jetman
August 5, 2007, 12:38 PM
Like most Colt revolvers the pricing has been gradually increasing and definitely won't be getting any cheaper, since thevy've ceased production. Like Pythons, Diamondbacks are becoming more collectable. Diamondbacks were only produced for 20 years where the Pythons were made for over 50 years, so fewer were made and becoming more valuable daily. If you want one you'd better find a DEAL on one soon or there won't be any more cheap ones to be found.... if not too late already. The also made fewer .22's than they did in .38 making them worth a little more too. I've got one of each, a 4" blued .22 and a 4" nickel .38 both in near perfect condition inthe box, and paid just under the asking price you mentioned. If it is NIB or LNIB I'd go for it unless you find a better deal locally. I guess it depends how bad you want one.
koja48
August 5, 2007, 12:43 PM
There are a couple pieces I want more at present, so I'll settle for "there's one in the family." Thanks for the advice, however . . .
SaxonPig
August 5, 2007, 01:25 PM
Paid something like $180 for a brand new one around 1980.
Paid $325 for a virtually new one in 1999 to replace the first one which was stolen in 1987. Debated with myself for a long time over spending so much. Left the gun shop and went to a gun show where I bought a mate in 38 Special for $180.
Now I see them selling for $600-$900.
I don't think I'd want one that badly.
I certainly wouldn't want one at $1,200. At that price I think they have to take you out to dinner and a movie, first.
But that's me.
GUNKWAZY
August 5, 2007, 02:01 PM
Yeah, and in the 60's you could buy a 427 AC Cobra for $6,000.
That was before, this is now. ;)
Jeff (GUNKWAZY)
koja48
August 5, 2007, 03:03 PM
And I opted for a 'Vette over that for the same $$$ . . . oh, to get a do-over. I really was a dumb a$$-hat in my youth . . . my Dad was right again, as usual, some more already . . .
Texas Colt
August 5, 2007, 03:49 PM
Yep, to have had the insight to buy a 427 Cobra in 1966... but $6000 was still a ton of money in '66. My parents bought a house in '67 for $9000.
GUNKWAZY has it right... that was then, this is now.
Neophyte1
August 5, 2007, 04:17 PM
Loaded Round: Sir: NO anything close to that.
A couple of the Fellows want you to spend just a little more and get yourself a collectible car. Save this money and keep shopping.:)
GUNKWAZY
August 5, 2007, 05:48 PM
Just before I was born I could have bought a Python for only $135.
Boy I wish I would have had the insight to buy from the womb.:banghead:
http://members.aol.com/toykwazy/coltpython.jpg
Jeff (GUNKWAZY)
The Lone Haranguer
August 5, 2007, 08:04 PM
Originally posted by GUNKWAZY:
Just before I was born I could have bought a Python for only $135.
But how long would it have taken you back then to make $135? ;)
Also of note: that Python cost 81%:what: more than the Detective Special in the same ad.
Peter M. Eick
August 5, 2007, 09:27 PM
Heck if Gramps had just bought a few of those Registered Magnums back in 1935 for $60 and packed them away I would be really happy right now.
I guess I feel pretty bad when I fess up that I bought my 38 Nickle Diamondback back in 78 for $235 with case, speed loaders, holster and belt new. I must have gotten pretty rooked if you could get them for $180 in 99.
The Lone Haranguer
August 5, 2007, 11:28 PM
Originally posted by Peter M. Eick:
Heck if Gramps had just bought a few of those Registered Magnums back in 1935 for $60 and packed them away I would be really happy right now.
:D
Given that 1935 was the middle of the Great Depression, it probably took even longer to make $60 than $135 thirty years later (the approximate time of the Colt ad above, from appearances).
magsnubby
August 5, 2007, 11:55 PM
There's a 4" blued one on Gun Broker for $875. There's also a blued 6" one for $1,360. It has five bids on it so far. That's some crazy stuff.
SaxonPig
August 6, 2007, 09:47 AM
I know, guns used to be cheaper and it's not fair to compare prices then and now. I offered the comments to illustrate my own experiences with a particular model.
Oh, I have my own car stories, too.
In the 1970s I bought a used 1969 Dodge Charger. It was a limited edition model called the "500" featuring a large rear window that had more slope to it (the trunk lid was only a few inches deep because of the longer roof-line) and a flat grill. I have read that only a few hundred were produced to qualify for NASCAR racing. Mine had the 426 Hemi engine with the Torqueflite auto trans (I would have preferred the 4-speed manual). I bought the car for $3,000 and sold it for $3,500 to make the down payment on my first house. Had I kept the car I could have paid cash for the house few years later. I saw a Charger 500 sell at auction a couple years back for over $100,000. Ouch.
Around 1971 a buddy offered me a 1959 Corvette in perfect condition. Model with the removable hardtop. Had the high performance 327 (I don't believe this was original to the car and came from a later Corvette) and 4-speed. I passed at $1,800. Kick... Kick... Kick...
GunTech
August 6, 2007, 09:53 AM
I've been watching Colt prices go up and up. Blue book is out of date. $1100-1300 for an excellent 22 Diamondback is pretty typical.
billhilly66
August 6, 2007, 02:00 PM
I sold one about a month ago for $850 LNIB.
absolute0
August 6, 2007, 05:46 PM
Seems as though Diamondback prices have almost outstipped Python prices.
It's a world gone mad I tell ya!
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