Path...............I feel what you are doing with the new rifle. I was in a high stress profession for 41 yrs. , and to stay sane , I was able to build m/l guns in my head , while experiencing the never ending travel my job required. So , when I was able to go home to my shop , I was like a psycho rifle builder. While traveling , I would plan what I had to do to build a certain gun , and fly into it when home. In 1974 , with the assistance of the Getz barrel brothers , I met Fred Miller , owner of a Don Allen 5 axis gunstock shaping machine. Fred could put an original antique gun in the follower side of his machine , and copy an original to a few thousandths of it's shape. For me , m/l rifle building went into high gear. All I had to do , is to look through Shumway's books , pick out a gun , and build it . My friend would turn a stock shape , mill the barrel channel , and drill the r/r hole. In 50 hours of my intense work , there was the gun from the Shumway book.
Anyway , being able to crank guns out fairly rapidly , allowed me to experiment with many different unusual m/lers , and experiment w/them at the range , in competition and hunting deer and small game. I built three Jaeger rifles , a .69 , .58 , and finally a .62. All these rifles shared the same difficulty in the woods , that being , they weren't 100 + yard rifles . Killed a bunch of deer w/ the easy carrying rifles , but passed up a bunch of deer meat knowing the sure kill distance was too far. I knew I was crazy about the .62 cal. PRB. , and knew a longer sight plain would give me the 125 yd. confidence I wanted. Also , the longer barrel allowed me to up the powder charge to 90 gr. ffg , the upper sweet spot for the .62. For me , to have a large bore rifle , with predictable 150 yd. accuracy is a dream come true. Wish you would have seen the longest deer kill shot I made on a doe one evening. Shot from a rest standing in an old building foundation. I held above the deer's muzzle about half an ear high cause she was walking. The ball broke her neck for an instant kill. The distance was an astounding 185 yds. , the longest shot of my life with m/l or ctg. rifle. Recoil of this 90 gr. ffg , in a 7.5 lb. rifle , is for a young man's body. You can handle it. I sold the .62 about 10 yrs. ago , and built myself a .50 cal. longrifle , 7/8 Oct. w/ 37" light 6.5 lb. old man's gun. 80 gr. FFFg , w/ .490 ball , has little recoil , should allow me to shoot at the range bench , 'til my Father calls me home........oldwood