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99. 99% of the public viewing a re-enactment could care less if a Regiment of Continental Army soldiers has 1730 or 1777 pattern French nor do they even know the difference . As long as it's a flintlock with bright steel and barrel bands , it's good enough for the reenactments I saw at Monmouth or Trenton NJ.
Reenactors sometimes get really picky just to have something to get picky about.
A Pedersoli 1795 is basically their 1766 Charleville with different lock stamps. I would have no problem carrying mine if someone needed me for some Continental Army living history. No one is going to care, you have a "big cool looking military musket" that's all people generally care about.
I do some Living History and even the other people involved kinda told me to calm down a little, I was getting too nitpicky with my gear.....they're like "you have a big,shiny cap lock musket and you're dressed like an 1860s farm hand , you're fine just shoot some blanks and make kids laugh"
The only 1777 I would ever consider using is a corrected 1777 An Xi. I owned a 1777 with the clamped middle band and screwed on front band, not a very practical design. I lugged the barrel with The threaded screw and it still was not sturdy. Pedersoli’s 1777 front band, simply screws to the barrel with no lugged attachment, this is a flaw which I don’t consider acceptable for shooting, all it takes is to not return the steel ramrod and load with 100 grains and that front band could fly off easily. The original 1777 had a lug in the shape of a half crescent moon for which the screw was attached to, even then the design was considered flawed.