Lance: I agree to some exstent. My issue is that other than non prefixes 250 is a large number given the truley limited number of guys chasing them. Lets face it, we all know who the other guys are. Maybe not personally but still there just aren't that many of us worried about rarity.
It really boils down to what you pursue. I realized long ago I couldn't own every #1 ever made. Heck I haven't seen every #1 made in the last 40 years and never will. What it boils down to for me at least is, do I want an early 130 serialed 22-250 "V" 1st Wood, Douglas barrel etc or do I want a shiny new rifle? Usually it's the older less common rifle.
Sadly mine isn't a zero sum collection. As the wife will point out that only works if you are willing to sell stuff. I tend to buy #1s I like and want to shoot/keep. Even the rare stuff. SO my VA check has mostly gone to guns including #1s. for the last 39 years. OUCH!!
It is sort of funny, for many years I, Splitz and other hounded Bill Ruger to bring out more/different #1s. His response was always that he was not in the business to satisfy the collector market. Okay, it's your company.
Now we have the reverse. So many calibers and configurations coming out constanly that a guy can't possibly afford them all. At least I can't. Added to that, I'm not a nostalgia guy. So military cartridges of WWI and the 3030- don't trip my trigger. If I was a cast bullet shooterthen the 45-70 or the 38-55 might appeal to me, but I'm not and they don't
I liken the spate of Dealer Specials to the Commemerative stamps. When I was a kid I collected stamps. There was the standard postage stamps in various denominations and a few commeratives each year. A person could collect. Now the post office issues 50-100 commeratives a year. A guy could go broke and wear himself out trying to get them all and their "value" has decreased significantly simply because the market is flooded with the number of designs AND the total production of stamps in general in each issue. Now they are just postage.
I liken truley rare #1s to a 1937 plate blockof four, $5 postage dues and the constant runs of 250 different #1s as todays commerative stamp. I still maintain MOST things designed to be "Rare" aren't.
Do I buy another 7mm Mag "V" for $800 or a 30-30 one of 250 for $1000+?? Oh, that's right, I bought another "V" 7mm Mag. ;-)
I will in the end buy a 257"A" but as a shooter. If it holds value over time, great. If not I'll enjoy it and frankly don't really care about lost "value" in the long run.
Ross