I picked up a gun today that I have admired since childhood. I have not seen one of them since the late sixties or early seventies when I owned my first one. The gun I am talking about is a Rayline Star Trek Rapid Fire Tracer Gun. I got a used one in VG to FINE condition that seems to work; although, I do not have any of the discs it uses for ammo to test it. Those discs are available but man are they ever expensive.
I'll settle for having the gun without the discs if only because the guns alone are being offered on eBay for $40 or more in used condition! Not a bad deal at all considering I paid all of $2.00 plus tax for it today. This is what they looked like new, that is if this is not a pic of a counterfeit, and I must say it looks like the real McCoy:
Another nice thing about the one I picked up is that it was made in the USA. Yep, I am that old that many things were still made in this country.
All the best,
Glenn B
I'll settle for having the gun without the discs if only because the guns alone are being offered on eBay for $40 or more in used condition! Not a bad deal at all considering I paid all of $2.00 plus tax for it today. This is what they looked like new, that is if this is not a pic of a counterfeit, and I must say it looks like the real McCoy:
Another nice thing about the one I picked up is that it was made in the USA. Yep, I am that old that many things were still made in this country.
All the best,
Glenn B
2 comments:
Unless I'm mistaken there should be open source code available for a home based 3-D Printer to print out all of those discs you could ever want. I'd think anyone who knew you would be agreeable. But if not a pretty decent entry level home set ups available for less than $300.00. And that's a cool score BTW.
Damn, those discs ain't that expensive to justify a 3D printer. I can probably get 100 of them for $40. The thing is they cost about 20 cents for 100 back in the day.
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