Grand idea!Maybe do a pewter fill under that front round section of barrel. It would look kinda neat and fill in the space around the barrel.
Grand idea!Maybe do a pewter fill under that front round section of barrel. It would look kinda neat and fill in the space around the barrel.
Did you ever try putting a complete working automobile together using Lego's? A kit rifle or pistol requires knowledge and skill also. I don't know about you, but I don't have feathers.
You still had to have the skill and knowledge of what would and wouldn't fit. BTW: Nice ML!!!!this is an example of what Bubba.50 is talking about, as far as parts going together. it started life as a plastic stocked Cabelas special.
i put it into a investarms stock while waiting for a nice TC stock to come along. it shoots so well in the IA stock it is going to stay there.
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or better yet a insatiable desire to see if something will work. and the willingness to possibly fail! as my late father in law always said, "you cant make a basket if you don't shoot the ball".You still had to have the skill and knowledge of what would and wouldn't fit. BTW: Nice ML!!!!
I totally agree with what you say. Success comes through failure.....or better yet a insatiable desire to see if something will work. and the willingness to possibly fail! as my late father in law always said, "you cant make a basket if you don't shoot the ball".
not taking one thing from Bubba's build, just so many people today are afraid to even try something.
Thomas Edison?I totally agree with what you say. Success comes through failure.....
There are a lot of quotes about success and failure..., but this wording is closest that I've found from Steve Jobs, "Success is often preceded by major failure".Thomas Edison?
this is an example of what Bubba.50 is talking about, as far as parts going together. it started life as a plastic stocked Cabelas special.
i put it into a investarms stock while waiting for a nice TC stock to come along. it shoots so well in the IA stock it is going to stay there.
54 calView attachment 88347View attachment 88348
Maybe do a pewter fill under that front round section of barrel. It would look kinda neat and fill in the space around the barrel.
That's a nice looking rifle! I love me some oct-round or oct-hexadecagon barrels! Is it tapered or just appear that way because of the transition? I'd prefer if companies that make non-forgery side locks would adopt less drop at the heel, even this stock, it's going to want to rotate up on ya a bit, but I never realized how nice the fore end looks on the old Renegades with that simple sculpting to the nose, goes with the barrel. maybe you get time later, you could make a nose cap to match the trigger guard, but cut it away it to still show off the wood a bit something like on this Austrian Jaegerstutzen, it even has a very similar trigger guard and barrel profile, just the transition happens later (it's for a bayonet in that case lol, photo from capandball.com)! The nose cap almost could be continued down to be a sort of "entry pipe" into the stock for the rod. They had tang mounted aperture sights, if we made that TC sight look a little more "antiquey" you could almost pass it off as a facsimile of a rifle that was privately owned by an Austrian-allied soldier lol. And to think, you pieced that thing together from other guns, that's cool!
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What I wish I could do along those lines would be to make my New Englander look sorta like an Enfield Musketoon. But that would require a complete custom stock among other things and skill that's above my pay-grade.
well Bubba, now we will see if i can operate more than a straight turnscrew. i dropped my flintlock today and snapped the wrist (again). running out of solid wood to fix so i am going to gouge out a new stock for it. maybe if i sharpen my turnscrews enough i won't have to find my chisels and gouges.
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