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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2012
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    Hemel hempstead
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    Tatty hw95

    Hi all, I have been offered a hw95k in .22 by a good friend. It shoots fine but a tad twangy but that is about as good as it gets. It’s in rather tatty condition with minor rust pitting on the barrel making it look like it’s been left in a barn and the stock has been stripped and bleached for some reason. Now what I want to know is what be a rough starting price to offer as I would want to get it re blued and fit a tbt kit to it if it is worth doing.
    Thanks in advance for any wise words from the 95 owners out there.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
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    cardiff
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    I wouldn't pay any more than £150 personally, Get the internals sorted and it Would make a good rough gun.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
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    Monmouth, Land of Wales.
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    As described, I wouldn't give more than £100. for it myself.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
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    Rochdale
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    I would say don't bother with the cosmetics, it would be cheaper to buy a nice one than to do a grubby one up..
    Fit a TBT kit and use it as it is or buy a tidy one (and still fit a TBT kit).

    Edit; Looks like others have got there before me.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
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    cardiff
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    496
    If you could get it for £100, spend £100 or so on a re-blue, £40 on a tuning kit and finish the stock yourself then you would have a seriously nice hw95 for second hand money, and the bluing would be miles better than Weihrauch's offering.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Farnborough
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    For me I wouldn't pay more than £80 for it. Chances are you will spend £50 on a spring/guides/seal package and fit it yourself. More if you need to pay someone to fit it for you. Then you will still need to refinish the stock (free apart from your time if you already have the materials) and it will still need the metalwork sorting. What is a reblue these days? £100 if you include post both ways?

    If you want a rough barn gun, buy it as cheap as keeps you and he friends and spend a little on it as possible. If you want a nice 95 start off with a much better example it will work out cheaper imho.
    Cheers Rich
    WANTED: Next weeks winning lottery numbers :-)

  7. #7
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    Jul 2012
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    thanks for the replies so far. I was thinking about offering £60-70 for it as it owns him nothing, I had already looked at the tbt kit for about £60 and I am willing to do the stock myself and re finish it so that saves a few pennies. I will see if airtech would do the blueing. Is there any major problems that I should look out for.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    cardiff, south wales.
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    3,372
    Restoring rough guns is very rarely worth the time, effort and cost. Myself, I would buy it cheap, tidy it up with tools and bits I have to hand and use it as is. No worries about getting the odd scratch, wet or dinks.

    John
    Law of any kind only affects those willing to abide by it.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Farnborough
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    4,406
    Quote Originally Posted by Lightning1981 View Post
    thanks for the replies so far. I was thinking about offering £60-70 for it as it owns him nothing, I had already looked at the tbt kit for about £60 and I am willing to do the stock myself and re finish it so that saves a few pennies. I will see if airtech would do the blueing. Is there any major problems that I should look out for.
    If you are going to get a full TBT kit your main wear an tear worries are sorted as you will have a new spring, seal and guides etc. Other than that a new breech seal might be an idea (the seal around where you put the pellet).
    Check it for obvious signs of abuse such as broken or cracked stock, barrel bent slightly upwards, any of which suggest it might have been fired with the barrel open.
    Look down the barrel at a light source to check the bore is nice ans shiny, not dull and rusty.
    Are the screws mangled suggestion sloppy servicing?
    It sounds like you fired it so I am guessing it cocked and fired ok apart from the twang.

    I still wouldn't bother with a reblue until you see how it shoots and how well the stock turns out. Great metalwork looks very odd with an iffy stock and mangled screws
    WANTED: Next weeks winning lottery numbers :-)

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