Skagan said:
Great piece Randy!:thumbsup:
I've been drooling over "chief's grade" guns for years. mostly caywood, but have also been scouting NSW.
I couldnt help but notice the sideplate inletting. did it come from NSW that way? and was it an issue for ya?
Randy Johnson said:
Hopefully, these pictures will be some help to someone interested in a North Star West Early English Trade Gun.
The side plate
. . .
It looks worse in the picture than it actually is. As a matter of fact, until you mentioned it, I hadn’t noticed it.
While I can understand why some people would be unhappy about it, I find it a very minor issue that really doesn’t bother me. There are several reasons for this.
First of all, it will be a working gun. After a year or so, when the brass is tarnished and there are a few dings and scratches on the stock, the small mistake on the side plate inletting won’t be something you notice unless you really look for it.
Overall, the inletting is excellent. Down the road, it will be easy to dismiss the small gap around the side plate as the result of removing the side plate at some point in time.
This is after all a trade gun. If it was a rifle where art was intended to be on (at least) an even keel with function I might feel differently.
It comes to the shoulder like nothing else I own, modern or muzzleloading.
The last factor is my personal makeup. I work in the service industry. Prior to my present job with a natural gas company, I was a maintenance supervisor for a large nursing home. Prior to that I made money on the side subcontracting electrical work. You do the best job you can, but sometimes things happen that are beyond your control. Most people understand this. Some don’t. I know how stressful it is when you have to be polite to someone who is being a ”¦.pain, and as a result I go out of my way not to cause that stress in others. Not saying I never have, but you really have to push me.
North Star West guns can accurately be described as semi-custom or semi-production. If I wanted to be sure that I would receive a smoothbore that was 100% perfect in every way I could have spent twice as much and probably (underlined and italicized) got one. As it is, I got a good reliable firearm, made in the US, for a price only slightly higher than an Italian import.