novioman Posted Thursday at 22:45 Share Posted Thursday at 22:45 What’s the feeling about adverts not mentioning that a gun was originally two toned, I ask as I offered on a pistol yesterday, offer accepted and then told, by the way, this was a two toned pistol, removed apart from a few specks of blue paint, and you should be able to remove them. Expensive pistol by the way £400 + In my opinion it should be in the advert. To rub salt into the wounds, the seller did the dirty on me and sold to someone else after we agreed a price he wanted. Disappointing. Rogerborg and Tackle 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GiantKiwi Posted Thursday at 23:29 Share Posted Thursday at 23:29 Should be mentioned always - depending on how the retailer has done it, it could mess with some guns actual finish. Still remember a certain retailer a long while back that mixed paint thinners in with their spray, so it completely lifted the stock finish. Rogerborg and Galvatron 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators Tackle Posted Friday at 00:50 Moderators Share Posted Friday at 00:50 Agree it should always be mentioned, especially if it's a pricey gun, even if it's had a good spray job over the two-tone, at some point somethings likely to rub, such as a holster, & the offending neon's gonna peek through🤮 Cannonfodder, Rogerborg and Galvatron 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rj1986 Posted Friday at 08:28 Share Posted Friday at 08:28 Anyone else interested in who two-tones a £400 pistol? But yes, it should always be mentioned. I picked up an ex-2T TM FNX from a shop. Didn't read it the description until after i bought it (it was a cracking price so no biggie) and from a distance you can't see any blue, but close up you can. Not enough to bug me, but if i was selling it or buying it without mentioning it, it would be an issue. Galvatron and Tackle 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Enid_Puceflange Posted Friday at 09:19 Share Posted Friday at 09:19 I’d like to know before paying, but have successfully removed paint from a couple of replicas without leaving any traces or damage before. Especially where trademarks are adding to a gnus value or desirability. I feel it being two toned also knocks the value down a touch more as there could be the possibility of damage to the original whilst removing it. (I’d never paint over the already applied two tone, just gonna look poop) Tackle and Galvatron 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cr0-Magnon Posted Friday at 09:45 Share Posted Friday at 09:45 24 minutes ago, Enid_Puceflange said: (I’d never paint over the already applied two tone, just gonna look poop) Glad I'm not the only one! For example with TM's, the slide is black plastic but someone sprays black over the blue paint rather than remove it 🤦♂️ Tackle 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Enid_Puceflange Posted Friday at 09:54 Share Posted Friday at 09:54 7 minutes ago, Cr0-Magnon said: Glad I'm not the only one! For example with TM's, the slide is black plastic but someone sprays black over the blue paint rather than remove it 🤦♂️ Yeah, painting over two tone will result in loss of detail in milled or sharp edged moulded parts, like slide serrations etc Tackle 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cannonfodder Posted Friday at 10:17 Share Posted Friday at 10:17 It would annoy me too. If they didn't mention that what else have they "forgotten" to tell? Tackle and Rogerborg 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
novioman Posted Friday at 11:57 Author Share Posted Friday at 11:57 (edited) 3 hours ago, rj1986 said: Anyone else interested in who two-tones a £400 pistol? But yes, it should always be mentioned. I picked up an ex-2T TM FNX from a shop. Didn't read it the description until after i bought it (it was a cracking price so no biggie) and from a distance you can't see any blue, but close up you can. Not enough to bug me, but if i was selling it or buying it without mentioning it, it would be an issue. Yes, who ever thought that was a good idea. This pistol is really a collectors piece, or maybe a re-enacter, so two toning was stupid to my mind. Edited Friday at 12:01 by novioman Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Supporters Rogerborg Posted Friday at 12:23 Supporters Share Posted Friday at 12:23 Breaks the first rule of airsoft, I doubt the owner calls his hits either. Tackle 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ButcherBill Posted Friday at 19:03 Share Posted Friday at 19:03 (edited) I reckon it should be disclosed regardless of the cost, two tones are less desirable than a rif whether the paint has been removed or covered up. If they sold to someone else then you've dodged a bull... BB. Edited Friday at 19:04 by ButcherBill Tackle and Galvatron 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Head Moderator Jedi_Master Posted Friday at 19:14 Head Moderator Share Posted Friday at 19:14 Former two toned guns should definitely be mentioned in the advert. Easy enough to change an advert title to include two tone when an IF; I do change adverts titles to include two tone when an obvious IF but much harder to spot (and police) one that has had the bright paint stripped or painted over. At one point had considered whether it was worth creating a whole new sub-forum category in the Classifieds for Two-Tone (IF) guns, to separate them out from genuine RIFs. Tackle, novioman and Cannonfodder 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BigStew Posted Saturday at 10:33 Share Posted Saturday at 10:33 15 hours ago, Jedi_Master said: At one point had considered whether it was worth creating a whole new sub-forum category in the Classifieds for Two-Tone (IF) guns, to separate them out from genuine RIFs. Still think that would be a good idea. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now