Quote from: Marius on August 22, 2013, 03:16:03 PMRight. Let me clarify my question a bit more: why from the other years, with regular SAK issues, some years seem much more difficult to find, worldwide, compared with other years? And my example was the '69.I can't tell you why exactly other than "They seem to have made less that year". I can tell you which years show up less, which is something that can be observed. Here's an updated version of the Soldier sales graph I made last year:(Image removed from quote.)Updating from the old trivia thread, since I posted that there have been three 1960 models that have gone up for sale, so we can now say that there is a dated Soldier knife for every year since 1921. You can see from this graph the years that show up the least post WWII are: 1961, 1960, 1958, 1946, 1995, 1974, 1972, 1969, 1951 and 1959. Note to anyone paying $200 for a 2008 M651 Soldier - 2008 is not shown on this graph because there have been so many of them sold (250+) that it skews the Y axis and makes it harder to see the numbers on the other years. They are very, very not rare.
Right. Let me clarify my question a bit more: why from the other years, with regular SAK issues, some years seem much more difficult to find, worldwide, compared with other years? And my example was the '69.
Balls. Was the 95 I was thinking of. Thank you fro replying.I now have a copy of the graph
I really thought they would have sold for more than that being rare.
Quote from: Pattas29 on April 07, 2016, 02:28:06 PMI really thought they would have sold for more than that being rare.Me too. My theory is that there isnt enough people who know it is that rare, and the few that do alread have one. So, while there is a very limited supply, the demand for that specific year is non existent. To the uninitiated, a 95 soldier looks just like every other year, and is worth the same in their eyes.