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Old 06-04-2010 | 06:29 PM
  #8  
LBR
Boone & Crockett
 
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 15,295
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From: Mississippi USA
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Not to get off the topic.......

From what I've seen, certain bows holding their value better is mostly a myth. Sure, if you pay $2,000 for a bow nobody ever heard of, most likely you'll loose your shirt if you sell it, but...

For the most part, if you look at it from a percentage standpoint, most hold their value equally. For instance....

You buy a brand new Samick Sage for $150 (they sell for less, but my math stinks, so I have to keep it simple). Keep it in decent shape, you can sell it used for $75-$100--50-75% of the new price.

You buy a new whatever (any of the "big" names) and pay $1,000 for it. You keep it in decent shape, you can sell it used for $500-$750--also 50-75% of the new price.

Sure, some bows bring more used than they did new. If you have an old Ben Pearson Cougar it will bring more now than it sold for new. That's a different ballgame.

A no-name won't usually sell as fast, unless you sell it in an area where folks are familiar with them, but unless you pay a sucker price you won't usually come out any worse for the wear on most any of them.

I used to buy and trade on used bows a lot, until the prices went up to the point where it didn't make any sense to me. $500-$750 for a used bow with no warranty????? When I can get a new bow that shoots as good or better (for me at least) for the same price or less, with a warranty, built to my specs? I had to start passing--I rarely run across a deal even on an old Pearson anymore. Folks want $150-$250+ for old bows...bows that, not that many years ago, I could buy for $25-$50...man, if I'd only known then what I know now....
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