77 caravan
Well-Known Member
Have this Coey model 60 in good condition stock has been refinished and the barrel liquid blued shoots good make me a reasonable offer don't know what it's worth
Agree. I have 2..great little guns, reliable. This one looks like the bluing is good..the stock looks refinished. Likely a great .22 for someone. $100 is certainly a fair priceI own 3 of them , well actually one is a single shot Model #39 which has a 22 inch barrel as opposed to a Model #75 which has the standard 24 inch barrel the other is identical to the OP's Cooey Model #60 and third is the Winchester-Cooey Model #600 which of course is just a rebranded Model 60. H.W. Cooey started making guns back around 1920 right through to 1979 mostly .22 's but some .410's as well . Needless to say there are more than 12 million Cooey's out there as they were a very affordable excellent shooting .22 . Rough shape ? 50 bucks ? Most .22 repeaters are at 100 bucks all day long and unless you find a .25 cal or Model #84/840 shotgun that would raise the value.
I have my grandpa's collection, he liked his Cooeys. I actually do not know how many are there, 10-12 that are functioning maybe, I should take a count again. There a a few parts guns as well. None are in pristine shape, they were used and abused. Various #39's, #60's, 75's. A Model 84 12ga, 30inch barrel, he taped the forestock onto it it kicks so hard that the grip flies off on the shot. I've never been brave enough to fire it. I have my grandma's model 840 .410. She was a woman of small stature and so my grandfather cut about 3 inches off the butt to fit her. I can recall shooting my first grouse out of a tree in the back yard when I was about 6 or 7 with that. He had a modified single shot specifically for the turkey shoot at the legion, it lost the front site and so he fashioned one from a silver dime, and he had some DIY trigger work done on it, it breaks at a hairs touch. He provided the thanksgivings turkeys for years with that gun. Of course I have my dad's 60 that he got from grandpa, the year my dad was born grandpa hunted rabbits that winter with his beagle Cleo. With a box of 100 rounds they ate something like 91 rabbits that winter, and he had a few rounds left after the season. That was the story he told anyways. They were not a wealthy family but they had food on the table, and grandma was very creative at cooking rabbits.I own 3 of them , well actually one is a single shot Model #39 which has a 22 inch barrel as opposed to a Model #75 which has the standard 24 inch barrel the other is identical to the OP's Cooey Model #60 and third is the Winchester-Cooey Model #600 which of course is just a rebranded Model 60. H.W. Cooey started making guns back around 1920 right through to 1979 mostly .22 's but some .410's as well . Needless to say there are more than 12 million Cooey's out there as they were a very affordable excellent shooting .22 . Rough shape ? 50 bucks ? Most .22 repeaters are at 100 bucks all day long and unless you find a .25 cal or Model #84/840 shotgun that would raise the value.
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