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Thread: M1 Thompson

  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by sundance435 View Post
    First question, why is it only selling for $15k? Cheapest I've seen is $20k for an actual, late-model M1A1, which as far as Thompsons go are the least "collectible". Thompsons, like any old, very desirable firearms are a niche area with lots of nuances that drive prices by thousands and tens of thousands of $$$. That said, any transferable full auto is potentially an actual investment, unlike most guns. I wouldn't quite call it liquid, though, and the price is largely driven by laws, so I would call them speculative investments.

    Second question, depending on the answer to the first, is what do you classify as "savings". If it's your 401(k) or funds you would normally use to pay mortgage/rent, etc., then no way. If it's your truly "disposable" income, maybe. How long did it take you to save that much? Fly has the simplest, best advice - don't go in hock to buy a gun.

    Friend has tons of guns and might be willing to sell it for the price. I’ve worked two jobs for a year to be a pilot. So I’m going to take the money and be reckless with it.

  2. #12
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    Best advice I can offer is, "ff there's any doubt, there's no doubt at all".

    In other words, if you have to ask, the answer should be evident.

  3. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by thepatriot2705 View Post
    Friend has tons of guns and might be willing to sell it for the price. I’ve worked two jobs for a year to be a pilot. So I’m going to take the money and be reckless with it.
    So long as it's a legit Savage or Auto Ordnance WWII period gun, keep in mind other companies like West Hurley made them and they are commercial copies produced right up until 1986.
    It's hard to be a ACLU hating, philosophically Libertarian, socially liberal, fiscally conservative, scientifically grounded, agnostic, porn admiring gun owner who believes in self determination.

    Chuck, we miss ya man.

    كافر

  4. #14
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    I'd wait until after the election. If senile shithead and his libtard minions win your investment might equal ZERO with the wave of a pen, and you can't deny you have it or "sold it to some guy at a gunshow". Just sayin'.....
    11C2P '83-'87
    Airborne Infantry
    F**k China!

  5. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by ABNAK View Post
    I'd wait until after the election. If senile shithead and his libtard minions win your investment might equal ZERO with the wave of a pen, and you can't deny you have it or "sold it to some guy at a gunshow". Just sayin'.....
    Politicians don't understand NFA. If you tell them they need to outlaw machine guns, they have a staff member look it up who informs them that they were already regulated back in 1934 and that is the end of it. It happened several times when people called for silencer bans following Sandy Hook and other high profile shootings.
    It's hard to be a ACLU hating, philosophically Libertarian, socially liberal, fiscally conservative, scientifically grounded, agnostic, porn admiring gun owner who believes in self determination.

    Chuck, we miss ya man.

    كافر

  6. #16
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    I've shared this thread with my 97 year old father in law who carried a Thompson during WW2. He was with the 2nd BN, 16th Infantry Regiment from 1941-1945. This picture is of him with his Thompson at Jacksonville, Florida Navy Base in early 1942 where the Army shared the training facility, and got into plenty of fights in the local dance halls with sailors.

    Not long after he shipped off to North Africa. He had been with a Signal Corps unit but transferred to the Infantry after Pearl Harbor. At D-Day he was in the 2nd wave at Omaha Beach that morning as an Army Buck Sergeant, carrying a radio and a Thompson. I think the only way we would spend $15K on a Thompson is if it had a serial number that matched the ones carried by my father in law. That would be quite the family heirloom:
    Last edited by OH58D; 09-25-20 at 07:29.
    Maj. USAR (Ret) 160th SOAR, 2/17 CAV
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    Black Mesa Ranch. Raising Fine Cattle and Horses in San Miguel County since 1879

  7. #17
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    HELL YES. DO IT.
    IF you can feed that bitch in the current environment, and all else is squared away...BUY IT.
    Get beau coup mags, spare parts, and of course ammo.
    You'll ALWAYS wish you had later in life. Itll eat at you.
    BUY IT.
    Lookin forward to pics & a range report.
    Last edited by Straight Shooter; 09-25-20 at 10:05.
    The obedient always think of themselves as virtuous rather than the cowards they really are.

  8. #18
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    Back in the 70's a M1A1 Thompson could be had for less than $1000. There was one for sale for $750 + the 200 stamp. I was a young man with a wife and daughter, a house note and a good job in the petrochemical industry but $950 was more than a months pay so I blew it off. If only I had known what was coming with the 86 act banning new full auto to civilians I would have bought it. Still want one.

  9. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by thepatriot2705 View Post
    Friend has tons of guns and might be willing to sell it for the price. I’ve worked two jobs for a year to be a pilot. So I’m going to take the money and be reckless with it.
    Without knowing more about your situation and finances (retirement), I don't know what to tell you. Me now wouldn't - me 10 years ago definitely would have. As close as a Thompson comes to a gun for which I'd sell my soul, I just think retirement savings is too important now in this country. And while I doubt that outlawing true automatic weapons in this country is on the radar of any current politician, I think it's inevitable as our gun rights are continuously chipped away at over the years. The key with any valuable gun is knowing when to sell, which is like trying to time the stock market.

  10. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by P2Vaircrewman View Post
    Back in the 70's a M1A1 Thompson could be had for less than $1000. There was one for sale for $750 + the 200 stamp. I was a young man with a wife and daughter, a house note and a good job in the petrochemical industry but $950 was more than a months pay so I blew it off. If only I had known what was coming with the 86 act banning new full auto to civilians I would have bought it. Still want one.
    There's a certain book that was tough to read because it basically catalogued all of the MGs and SMGs you could easily buy back in the day.

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