see the link below for the owners manual
it would be worth $40 to $50 in working condition (Still holds C02 no leaks)
What condition is it in. That determines the value
Crosman offers a free service to locate independent shops that repair older Crosman air guns. See the link below
Crosman offers a free service to locate repair shops that repair older model Crosman airguns. see the link below.
See the link below for Crosman's list of dates. READ the message at the top of the page when it opens.
No. C02 is required to make it fire. Without C02 all you can do is pull the trigger.
The Easy Way: Crosman Offers a service to locate repair shops that repair older Crosman Airguns. See the link below. My Way: I own several Crosman 38T and older 357's I've rebuilt several. Seal Parts from the 38t were used in the design of the 357. Open the link below and then download the Parts manual for the 38t and older 357 and compare the seal part numbers from each pistol and you will find several are the same. They even began with the number "38". Crosman no longer supplies parts for the 38t or 38c but they do have parts for the 357 (Same parts used on both) So you and call customer service and order some of the 38 parts listed on the 357. I was able to rebuild two 38t's this way
If you have the original C02 bottle. Crosman warns you NOT to use it. see the link below for the owners manual from Crosman.
It would be worth between $65 - $75
Crosman offers a service to locate shops that repair older products. See this link. http://www.crosman.com/general/find-a-service-center
This is an interesting question, because I've rebuilt several Crosman 357 and a few 38's. The 38 came out long before the Crosman 357's. When Crosman developed the 357 for sale they stopped production on the 38's and dropped all the parts for it, EXCEPT the C02 parts. Three of the C02 parts are common between the two pistols. All 357 parts began with the number #357 and all 38 parts began with the number #38. If you look at the parts diagram for the 357 you will see three parts starting with #38. These three parts are interchangeable and can still be ordered from Crosman. (see the links below) Crosman supplies parts for all their current airguns. Now if you don't want to go that route then Crosman offers a free service to locate shops that repair older Crosman air guns. See the links below.