Perhaps the major reason for the limited number of high end guns in the ARL virtual museum has less to do with the reasons suggested here, and more to do with the time-tested belief by many owners of the finest guns that over-exposure of better pieces tends to damage re-sale value. Many of the finest rifles are owned by high-end collectors, and most that I have talked to think the best selling price can be obtained when an object is new to the market, or has minimal pre-market exposure. The "newness" or "freshness" of a piece causes greater curiosity, interest, and desire to see and own it among potential buyers. We see that at many major auction houses when they advertise with terms such as "never before seen" or "recently discovered" or "fresh out of the attic." Most owners of high dollar, top-end rifles want to protect their large investment in the items...and a major step in doing so is preventing over exposure.
I do not believe ARL will ever be offered many of the finest rifles for display in its virtual museum. It is not because the owners' fear our vetting comments, but rather because they believe wide internet exposure dampens the specialness, freshness, and future desirability and demand for their rifles. It is probably more an art than a science knowing how to whet potential buyers' appetites by exposing a fine antique, but not over-exposing to where interest begins to dampen. I believe they are simply not going to take a chance on over-exposing their finest rifles, particularly when their guns would sit alongside a wide range of other lesser rifles presented pictorially in a sometimes rambling or inconsistent manner.
Many of the recent comments seem to be fixated on getting finer rifles into the ARL museum. We seem to forget, in the arguments for promoting the Kentucky rifle as a work of "fine art" to generate wider public interest, that it was one of the critical working tools used daily by our forefathers to settle the frontiers of our territories and states. It wasn't until the frontier had passed and its dangers removed, that most of the wealthy, or newly wealthy, men acquired their fine, highly decorated rifles to impress their peers with. The real Kentucky rifle was more the high volume gun that went west to settle the frontier, and not the elegant, limited works of art that we all love, but most can't afford to buy. ARL has a small selection of "golden age" arms in its virtual museum...makes me wonder if the small number, when compared to the much larger number of more standard rifles, isn't somewhere in the ballpark of what the natural ratio is between the "works of art" and the common man's Kentuckies. If so, we're not doing so badly. Shelby Gallien