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My only flintlock thus far was a Tennessee in .54 made by Jack Garner. I’m leaning towards Southern style rifles but I am learning to appreciate Pennsylvania and Virginia styles more.
I'm considering having a flint Longrifle built; likely a Tennessee style, 42" barrel. Ideally, I'd like to divest myself of my current rifles and have just the one rifle for plinking, small game, and the possibility of a deer hunt.
I'm thinking a .45 cal will fit the bill; I can hunt rabbits and grouse with light charges and roundballs, and stoke it up with heavier charges and Lee REAL 200-grain bullets for deer.
I see that the Colerain barrels have a 1:56 twist compared to the 1:66 offered by Green Mountain. Should there be any practical difference in performance between these two barrels, given my intended use?
All opinions welcome; thanks in advance!
I'm considering having a flint Longrifle built; likely a Tennessee style, 42" barrel. Ideally, I'd like to divest myself of my current rifles and have just the one rifle for plinking, small game, and the possibility of a deer hunt.
I'm thinking a .45 cal will fit the bill; I can hunt rabbits and grouse with light charges and roundballs, and stoke it up with heavier charges and Lee REAL 200-grain bullets for deer.
I see that the Colerain barrels have a 1:56 twist compared to the 1:66 offered by Green Mountain. Should there be any practical difference in performance between these two barrels, given my intended use?
All opinions welcome; thanks in advance!
I'd be considering changing the order to a swamped barrel. Better balance and handling characteristics.So I've gone ahead and placed my order at TVM Natchez. Southern Rifle, Presentation maple, .45 cal, .42" straight octagon barrel, red-stained stock, browned steel furniture.
I'll be waiting about a year; good thing I have other shootin' irons to fool with.
I'm considering it; I just wonder if the swamped barrel would be such a noticeable difference on an already-light rifle.I'd be considering changing the order to a swamped barrel. Better balance and handling characteristics.
Agreed.I would skip some other expenses in life to upgrade to a swamped barrel. Depends on how you use it, but for walking I would prefer lighter and more balanced weight distribution.
Amen, Green Mtn, is all I will use for my builds. Hard to beat a .45 cal for most things up through deer . If elk or bear are on the card then I'd move to a .54 or .58 round ball. I think most guns built and used east of the Mississippi where under 50 cal. When one had to pack eveything on their back or mule for a several months long hunt, economy of weight and power needed had to be figured pretty close..45 is an excellent caliber choice and will serve your purpose, large and small, using a patched round ball for both. I would go with the Green Mountain barrel.
Robin
I went with a straight 13/16s barrel on my SMR in 36 inch length and an very happy with it. Being only 5'6" tall I'd have had to carry a stool around with me to load it if it were 42 inches! I think swamping makes a lot of sense with heavier barrels and calibers , .50 and above, but not much in smaller diameter bores and thin barrels .Just for a comment, I had a TVM Virginia in a swamped 54 caliber. Seemed to balance very well, but it was long at 42 inches. Silly but it was a bit long to go in my 4Runner easily. So i traded for a 36 inch straight in 54, and it was a ton easier to get in the car. But in my perception the swamped felt maybe lighter? Probably the same weight, but the balance perception was very different for me. Anyway same rifle, different barrels made the rifles seem very different.
Good looking rig!I resurrected this thread to update: I did in fact order a .45 Southern from TVM in July 2021; I took delivery two days ago.
It's gorgeous. Fancy curly maple, 42" X 13/16" Colerain barrel, Siler flint lock, Davis triggers.
Thanks to all who replied to this thread, and to Hanshi for a little extra advice.
The cardboard box photos came from TVM, the snow photos are mine and really show the beautiful colour and grain.
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