![]() Rick tries to sell a couple one of the shop's most prized items, a $10,000 Ormolu clock, a.k.a. Army Air Corps uniform a 1970s Barnett crossbow that hasn't been fired in almost 40 years a 1929 Remington portable typewriter and a collection of Playboy magazines that belonged to the seller's husband. Items appraised include a World War II U.S. After Chumlee buys a fake etching for $300, Rick tries to train him to properly identify real etchings, and gives him a test. Items appraised include a 1735 map of Boston a 2006 Yamaha YZ250 dirt bike and a 1976 Piper Warrior airplane. ![]() The purchase of a stolen watch by one of the staff results in a visit by the police and a test given to Corey and Chumlee by Rick. Items appraised include a framed document signed by John Hancock a bullwhip whose owner says was sold to him by a stuntman who used it in one of the Indiana Jones films and a unique glass katana sword whose owner says he forged it to see if it could be done. After Corey's knowledge of the shop's inventory is called into question, Rick offers to give him a $2,500 bonus if he passes a quiz or place him on the graveyard shift if he fails. Items appraised include a 1930s Wayne gas pump that needs to be restored a 1930s slot machine and three World War II bayonets whose modifications cause concern for Rick. Rick and Richard are forced to address Peaches' habitual lateness. ![]() Items appraised include two 1929 Ford Model A cars, a Coupe and a Roadster, with each car having a different owner a collection of World War II bond posters and a calf-roping machine. Items appraised include a dilapidated 1950s Coca-Cola machine brought in by Ron Dale (the brother of recurring restoration expert Rick Dale and future cast member of American Restoration) an 18th-century flintlock pistol that needs authentication a collection of comic books published from the 1960s to the 1990s a 1941 Philco radio and a piece of the Berlin Wall. The Old Man sets up a cuss jar due to habitual swearing on the part of the shop's staff. Items appraised include a 1750 blunderbuss gun whose owner needs to buy an engagement ring a fighter jet ejection seat claimed to be from World War II a collection of autographed Vegas celebrity photos that once belonged to a brothel owner and a 1966 Schwinn Sting-Ray bicycle. After Rick's wife asks him to give his niece, Kirsten, a job at the shop, Rick offers Corey his long-desired raise if he can successfully train her to distinguish a real Rolex watch from a fake one. Items appraised include a baseball autographed by the 1951 World Series Champion New York Yankees that needs to be authenticated a 25-piece Knights of the Round Table set cast in pewter and a 1902 West Point Cadet jacket owned by World War II Lieutenant General Oscar Griswold. Items appraised include a 1962 Lincoln Continental whose restoration costs may break the shop's investment a 1942 Gibson L-7 guitar whose owner claims was played for Al Capone on his birthday Confederate money and an Atari 2600 home video game console with a collection of game cartridges. Items appraised include a medieval jousting helmet a Big Dog custom chopper a 1981 tabletop Pac-Man video game and an 1884 Springfield Trapdoor rifle that the Harrisons test in the hopes that it still fires. Items appraised include an 1849 Colt revolver a 1954 Gretsch guitar whose owner says was used by Robert Duvall in the 1983 film Tender Mercies three 1967 Salvador DalĂ artist's proof woodcut prints and a 1984 Chris-Craft boat that Corey buys without testing it first, much to his father and grandfather's anger. The Old Man and Corey form a bet on Corey's ability to resell a Rolex GMT for more than $4,800 that would require either the Old Man to wear Ed Hardy pants to work, or Corey to wear a suit and tie. Items appraised include an autographed Chuck Berry Fender guitar a Civil War cavalry saber whose unsharpened blade gives Rick cause for doubt a Native American energy totem and a 1916 National Cash Register. After the Old Man misidentifies a Carson City silver dollar, he is cajoled into getting an eye exam. Items appraised include an 1890 Hotchkiss gun used during the American Indian Wars that could be worth up to $40,000 if it can be authenticated with a test firing a replica suit of Roman armor brought in by a former Caesars Palace employee and a Knapp custom table saw, whose transportation back to the shop proves challenging.
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