I was surprised to see escutcheons around the keys used on the Sapergia version. I had been advised by several sources that escutcheons were not used on very early "plains style" Hawken fullstock rifles. :idunno:
Going with a southren style rifle in full stock and flintlock you get very close to the same fit as with a hawken. Lancaster 'plain rifles' like the JJ Henry and the 1803 US rifle the harpers ferry rifle alsofit simular to a hawken.Khufu said:I am after a Hawken only because the stock geometry fits me so well, and I am trying to be accurate because it is such an Icon in the history of the American rifle. I am not looking for a rifle that fits a particular period, just one that I can use to hunt big game, from a horse.
I could just make something up, and it would work just as well, but I do not have a Hawken replica so two birds one stone. I have a p53 Enfield, it would work, but its not a flintlock. rather than copy a particular style and distort is geometry to fit me, which I have done, I would rather pick something to copy that fits. at the city range here in albuquerque most muzzleloaders are inlines, the rest mass produced or badly assembled kit guns. not anything to ask if you could take a shot with. I attended a few Rendezvous when I lived in Utah, But I was too young and stupid to pay attention. I simply picked a Hawken because I know they fit.
I am looking at a L&R late English lock 36" tapered Rice barrel 1 1/8"to 1" in .58cal 1 in 70 twist round bottom cut rifling iron furniure and copy that possible flint gun's stock. if I were to guess (read wishful thinking)the original lock, a flinter was damaged, and some small town "black smith" drilled the touch hole and added the drum, then salvaged a percussion lock for a snail drum from a blown up rifle and hacked it to fit the drum. as has been noted Sam Hawken was too good to do a hack job like that. I have a friend in DC and I will ask her nicely to go to the smithsonian and photograph the heck out of that rifle and ask a curator a dimention so the rest can be done on a computer. there has been some awesome information posted here, and some of those beautiful Hawkens have really got me commited to building this gun.myshootinstinks said:I think elk hunting from horseback is where a Hawken really shines. With the long tang and trigger plate the Hawken is a very durable gun, much less susceptible to breaking at the grip area. If you need to clean it while on the hunt the hook breech is a great advantage.
I'd like to put a rifle together in .54 with a Chambers Ketland flint, about a 33" barrel, using a half-stock. :hmm:
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