I can tell you. I paid $300 for my pedersoli Bess. It was really dirty and I assume owned by an American reenactor, as it had never been polished and had surface rust. I removed the rust. I removed the Italian markings (yes, I took a photo to add to bottom of barrel someday). I drove over to Allentown, to the Lehigh gun show for Paul Ackerman to stamp the barrel for me ($20-40, I don’t remember). Lodgewood doesn’t do that. Then in the spring, I drive down to Winchester at the NSSA Nationals and delivered Auntie Bess to Dave from Lodgewood (because I’m a tightwad and wasn’t spending all that to ship it). I had him defarb it ($200) and redo the lock markings ($200 more because I wanted “Dublin Castle” on it). I broke a mainspring using Evaporust to clean the lock plate — mainspring exploded ($50 or so). Yeah, didn’t know about that — @FlinterNick told me about it after I posted. Live and learn.So what does it cost to defab a perdersoli?
I meet Dave again at the Maryland Antique show and picked it up. Still a tightwad. Neat show. Multiple people and dealers tried to buy the gun as they thought it was real.
I’ve since had the frizzen hardened because it wouldn’t spark right. I’d like to get the lock polished more like it should be and have talked to Nick.
Anyway, I’ve got around $800 in the gun (with purchase) and am happy with it now. Of course, I got mine for a great price. That helped.
I’d love a long land, but probably will have to settle for an Indian one, maybe. I don’t need it though. I’m getting older and reenacting is harder and not realistic. Soldiers were not elderly. I’m now 59, not quite elderly, but not really able to portray ac soldier. They were younger guys. Yes, I know, many do, but it’s my opinion. Do it right or… and yeah, my gun is nicer than my colonial kit. I did it backwards.
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