I searched the forum threads about the AH for curiosity and have something useful to say about them so here it is.
I won one NIB at a shoot. It is a 50 flinter 1:66 Utah built. Other than the thin wrist on the stock, it looked serviceable for my use and well finished. Was lining it out for my ML matches...and launched a lead ball over the berm...
What happened was the hammer assembly snapped off internally about in the middle. Gun fired unexpecting when this happened.
Here is the useful information. I was able to locate the spare parts! A new hammer assembly was shipped to me from the EU. Spain I think. Had to pay vat taxes etc. What I received was a raw assembly that needed bent and heat treated. A friend who has since passed was able to heat treat it and fit it for me. I think Traditions is who owns the spare parts. That happened about 10 years ago. Gun running fine now still. Bottom line is that I think the gun is assembled from Spanish parts. Have not research it lately, but when I did, Traditions was selling this exact same but called it something different.
I won one NIB at a shoot. It is a 50 flinter 1:66 Utah built. Other than the thin wrist on the stock, it looked serviceable for my use and well finished. Was lining it out for my ML matches...and launched a lead ball over the berm...
What happened was the hammer assembly snapped off internally about in the middle. Gun fired unexpecting when this happened.
Here is the useful information. I was able to locate the spare parts! A new hammer assembly was shipped to me from the EU. Spain I think. Had to pay vat taxes etc. What I received was a raw assembly that needed bent and heat treated. A friend who has since passed was able to heat treat it and fit it for me. I think Traditions is who owns the spare parts. That happened about 10 years ago. Gun running fine now still. Bottom line is that I think the gun is assembled from Spanish parts. Have not research it lately, but when I did, Traditions was selling this exact same but called it something different.