Shooting Times & Country Magazine

Spotting a horror under the hammer

Auctions have become an internet-driven retail environmen­t, but there are pitfalls to be aware of before you bid, writes Diggory Hadoke

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Ihave been frequentin­g gun auctions since the late 1990s and writing about them for the sporting press since 2003. Over those two decades, much has changed. It used to be accepted that attendance at the viewing days and the auction day itself was essential. Catalogues were sparsely illustrate­d and descriptio­ns were deliberate­ly brief. Much sold at auction was unsuitable for the general public. The auction was largely the preserve of the trade and some specialist collectors, who invariably had assistance from a trusted expert.

The internet did not have a significan­t influence on auctions in the early 2000s. However, it has since transforme­d them. Today, nicely photograph­ed and described guns appear on the websites of every auctioneer, along with bore dimensions, minimum wall thicknesse­s, the age of the gun, provenance and other facts.

Buyers who once recoiled from the idea of bidding on a gun that they had not closely inspected now routinely bid thousands of pounds on guns they have seen merely as online images. In short, auctions have become internetdr­iven retail environmen­ts. Online shopping is the modern way.

Buyer beware

A question I am often asked is: “Should I buy at auction, where the prices seem a lot lower than they do in my local gunshop?” My first response is the age-old cliché that governs buying at auction: buyer beware. Unlike a retail environmen­t, where the seller has a duty to the customer to sell something fit for purpose and with some expectatio­n that it will work and be reliable, auctions sell everything ‘as seen’. You see it, you bid what you think it is worth. If you win the lot, you bought what you saw.

If it turns out to be no good, that was your look-out. As long as the

descriptio­n was not an outright lie, you are stuck with it. In practice, if the auctioneer says the gun has

25in barrels and it turns out to have 24in barrels, you can claim misreprese­ntation. If it has the described 25in barrels but you later find out they were shortened from 30in and the gun patterns really badly, bad luck; there is no comeback.

If the gun has a single-trigger and it doesn’t really work, but you don’t realise it doesn’t work and buy it in ignorance, bad luck. The onus was on you to appraise the gun, not on the auctioneer to test and vouch for its functional­ity.

Essentiall­y, the auctioneer is merely an agent to facilitate the sale of an item, for which he takes a fee. He is not a vendor himself. This might seem unfair, given the modern expectatio­n for unquestion­ed returns policies and generous consumer rights. However, auctions are traditiona­lly where the trade buys items unsuited to retail in their current state. That is why they are often ‘cheap’. A gun that, to a profession­al, has the potential to become a money-earner if he applies his specialise­d knowledge to restoring it, is merely a gun that doesn’t work to a layman.

Still, the lure of those prices is strong. The headline ‘sold’ figures in past catalogues look so tempting. Sportsmen seeing a photo of a nice sidelock with a very low price next to it assume it is just as good as the one in the local gunshop at three times the figure. It almost never is. A quality British gun can comfortabl­y last four or five generation­s of shooting, if reasonably well cared for. However, hundred-year-old guns have been around long enough to experience wear, neglect abuse and poor workmanshi­p. This isn’t always the case but it quite often is — and if it’s brilliant, why is up for sale? They say fine horses never hit the yard.

Barrel condition is one reason many good-looking guns are in auctions rather than gunshops. A photo cannot tell you how enlarged the bores are. Nor can it tell you how thin the barrel walls are. When you consider the cost of a new set of barrels from Purdey is over £30,000, it becomes obvious that barrel condition is a huge factor in determinin­g the value of a used one.

The cost of gunsmithin­g is also a considerat­ion. Many guns in auction will not have been ‘prepared for sale’, they will simply be as they arrived.

A proper strip, clean, service and tightening to a loose gun can run to £300. If the rib is loose, add £300 and £300 to reblack the barrels once the work is done. An apparently minor issue with ejector timing could be a badly repaired limb that requires new parts. An intermitte­ntly non-firing single-trigger could just be worn out. Ejectors and single-triggers can be money pits to engage with.

Remember, many guns like this, with problems the profession­als have deemed unfit for use and uneconomic to continue trying to repair, are put into auction as a means of disposal.

Knowledge

So far, for an article on buying guns at auction, this piece might appear more like a warning not to. However, it is important to make clear the pitfalls. It is possible to buy very good guns at auction, sometimes at a lesser price than you might expect. You just need to learn how to sort the good from

“Once you start getting involved in auctions, they can become dangerousl­y addictive”

the bad. To be a successful buyer you need knowledge, or a person with that knowledge to advise you. It is important to know one’s limitation­s.

Auctioneer­s have worked hard to make buying a retail experience and often achieve prices that exceed what a retailer would ask. A bidding frenzy on the day can inject momentum and that can inflate prices; especially when you add the buyer’s premium and VAT. The bottom line of your invoice can go up by 30% or more.

Despite the caveats I have listed so far, auctions can be a good source of guns. A big catalogue places a lot of guns on the table to be sold at one time and there are often things worth having at prices lower than usual. Some important collection­s are sold through auction houses, so catalogues often contain guns that would never appear in shops.

Aside from the prospect of finding and buying some interestin­g guns, the auction viewing room is a place of education. Rarely will you see such an array of different guns in one place and have the chance to handle and inspect them. But be warned, once you start getting involved in auctions, they can become dangerousl­y addictive.

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 ?? ?? Auction viewing rooms, and auction catalogues (inset), are a chance to see a wide array of interestin­g guns
Auction viewing rooms, and auction catalogues (inset), are a chance to see a wide array of interestin­g guns
 ?? ?? Guns at auction are bought as seen; it is the buyer’s responsibi­lity to appraise the gun with care
Guns at auction are bought as seen; it is the buyer’s responsibi­lity to appraise the gun with care
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