The News
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The Cyprus Defense Ministry has sold off most of it's collection of old Enfields, Sten machine guns and Bren guns. The sale brought in €613,000, a bit less than the €2 million expected as not all the guns were sold. Another sale date is expected. The Stens were the most desired guns, as over 700 applied to buy one of a hundred guns available. 1200 Mk4 Enfields were sold along with 905 Bren guns, leaving plenty of those 2 models left. The weapons were cheap, with the Stens going for €427, the Enfields for €214 and the Brens for €342. The downside is they were decommissioned.
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In a story from the BBC, British enthusiasts are buying up old hardware being retired by the British Army. A Jaguar-engined Sabre Tank is profiled in their video, and the guy also owns an armored personnel carrier, an anti-aircraft gun and a Ferret scout car. This guy sounds like he lives in the US, not England. There is a Ferret scout car and a Sabre just down the street from here in Cincinnati.
Military vehicles have certain charm for guys that is undeniable. Most men serve their military duty in the most impressionable years of their lives, and the appeal of owning some heavy metal is strong when you have age and time and resources on your side. But with the anti-gun bias of the British Government, you would think they would frown on owning military hardware. The video below is another Englishman, who fixed up his Sabre tank with his son, and enjoys thrashing the local countryside with it. Recently, a Harrier Jump Jet was thrown off Ebay when another Englishman tried to sell it. (It still is for sale by the way.)
British tank enthusiasts may soon get more fodder for their mill, as the DSA (Disposal Services Authority) has got word to get rid of 40% of the British Army's tanks. Oh yes, and all the Harriers. Seems to be a golden age for military collectors, as the world's governments all run out of money.
Video from DrGenestealer on YouTube