Alexander L. Johnson said:
The flintlock they come with can use some adjustment, but it shootable right out of the box. You can also buy replacement locks from L&R should you ever need a better one.
It amazes me how many people buy cheap guns knowing that there is a high probablity of replacing the lock or barrel, or both, to make it work reasonably well.
By the time the lock is replaced, then maybe the barrel, then later a fancier stock, more has been spent in what is still a cheap gun than would have been invested in a quailty gun, to begin with.
Cheap is cheap, which translates to poor quality components. Poor quality comnponents is related to poor design, in general. Not only in locks and barrels, but in stock design and poor workmanship.
jerem0621,
I suggest saving your money for another few months or even a year, if necessary, and buying a gun that will not need replacement parts.
IMHO,if you really need a gun now, a TC flint gun is probably the best value in production guns, with the Lyman Great Plains rifle second. From there, IMHO, the choice drops off to not much. IMHO, I would avoid anything made by traditions, or Pedersoli becasue of spotty quality and too many design flaws.
IMHO, a better quality gun can be had from Early Rustic, or one of the other semi custom builders in kit form, or in the white for you to apply stain and finish to wood an metal.
[url]
http://www.earlyrusticarms.com/pricesanddescriptions.htm[/url]
If you just have to have that gun now, I suggest buying a good used TC product to see if you like shooting a flint gun. A good used TC can be had for considerably less than $500. If you then decide that a higher quality flint gun is right for you, the TC can probably be resold for what you have in it to get somthing better.
J.D.