Anyone else on here ever buy a pedersoli with bad sanding quality on the stock?

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user 57894

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Hello everyone I just bought my first Pedersoli. It’s a frontier flintlock. I went with them because I’ve heard nothing but good things about them from a lot of ppl I know. But when I received my rifle I’m really disappointed in the stock finish. Someone got a little carried away when sanding and sanded a low spot in the wood around the lock. Can some of you give me some input if I’m being to picky or if it’s unacceptable?
 

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Hello everyone I just bought my first Pedersoli. It’s a frontier flintlock. I went with them because I’ve heard nothing but good things about them from a lot of ppl I know. But when I received my rifle I’m really disappointed in the stock finish. Someone got a little carried away when sanding and sanded a low spot in the wood around the lock. Can some of you give me some input if I’m being to picky or if it’s unacceptable?
I don't like that stuff either,but if that's all you can find wrong with a mass produced gun you are doing good.Both flaws can easily be fixed.
 
If everything else is mechanically good, I would try to overlook it. You could return it and maybe get something that has real issues. Alternatively you could contact seller and ask for some scratch back. Hopefully you will get enough enjoyment shooting your rifle that the flaws will be forgotten about.
 
Agree that the poor inletting would bother me more than the choppy shaping of the stock in that area. If it bothered me enough, I’d strip the stock, detail that area with a crossing file, sand and refinish the stock. I see that the pores of the wood are not filled. A top quality stock finishing job always has the pores filled. You could accomplish that at the same time.

A decent amount of work would be involved but I understand the annoyance.
 
Being picky is OK but at the price you have to except some short comings. If that was on a Kibler kit it would be un-except-able. The important thing at this point is, does the rifle work? Before shooting look it over for all the things that will affect safety and function. Then decide if it’s the rifle you want to keep.
 
If everything else is mechanically good, I would try to overlook it. You could return it and maybe get something that has real issues. Alternatively you could contact seller and ask for some scratch back. Hopefully you will get enough enjoyment shooting your rifle that the flaws will be forgotten about.
I don't care for the modern finishes on these, I'd strip, sand smooth the defect as much as possible, and refinish with more period-correct stain & oil. It's not a huge defect, but I'd be a bit upset, too.
 
I had several depressions n couple of deeper dents in the stock of my Pedersoli Scout kit. I just sucked it up n cleaned up their mess best i could. I am hunting with it n i know as older n disabled clumzy man i will do worst in the woods
 
If everything else is mechanically good, I would try to overlook it. You could return it and maybe get something that has real issues. Alternatively you could contact seller and ask for some scratch back. Hopefully you will get enough enjoyment shooting your rifle that the flaws will be forgotten about.
I thought about that as well. Getting a replacement that’s worse. The locks functions great only complaint I have with it is the front trigger pull is heavy without the set trigger engaged.
 
That wouldn’t bother me as much as the poorly inlet lock.
Remember, this is a production gun, like everything else, you get what you pay for.
I agree can’t expect the quality of a custom gun maker out of a production rifle. Still annoying though. I have Spanish rifles that have better wood working than this 😆
 
Agree that the poor inletting would bother me more than the choppy shaping of the stock in that area. If it bothered me enough, I’d strip the stock, detail that area with a crossing file, sand and refinish the stock. I see that the pores of the wood are not filled. A top quality stock finishing job always has the pores filled. You could accomplish that at the same time.

A decent amount of work would be involved but I understand the annoyance.
I’m going to take it to my local custom long rifle builder that does amazing work to work on the stock to blend it in if I’m stuck with it.
 
Being picky is OK but at the price you have to except some short comings. If that was on a Kibler kit it would be un-except-able. The important thing at this point is, does the rifle work? Before shooting look it over for all the things that will affect safety and function. Then decide if it’s the rifle you want to keep.
Those are all great points to bring up. The rifle does function as it should with no safety concerns with the function of the trigger and lock assembly, the frizzen has a nice hardness to it. Only issue I found is the front trigger has a very hard trigger pull. But works fine with the hair trigger set, so I’m not concerned about that cause I always shoot with a hair trigger and yes I’m now thinking of the price versus quality aspect of the whole thing.
 
I had several depressions n couple of deeper dents in the stock of my Pedersoli Scout kit. I just sucked it up n cleaned up their mess best i could. I am hunting with it n i know as older n disabled clumzy man i will do worst in the woods
I’m going to be using mine in our PA heritage season and thought well I guess it won’t feel as bad if I drop it cause it’s already messed up. 😆
 
Trying to get satisfaction from the vendor is probably more hassle than it's worth, very annoying, but probably just as easy to fix/repair yourself. Hope it turns out OK!
 

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