Brokennock
Cannon
Sounds boring...Not harder, but it is boring. One pass each of 2-3 drills of increasing size till the rifling is gone. Then an hour of reaming. All done in a morning, I’d think.
Sounds boring...Not harder, but it is boring. One pass each of 2-3 drills of increasing size till the rifling is gone. Then an hour of reaming. All done in a morning, I’d think.
It was just laying there and you had to pick it up…. Puns are for scoundrels and neer-do-wells!Sounds boring...
It surprised me how little he charged to freshen a barrel, that is a lot of work. First you have to make a casting of the bore. Then you have to make a cutter and install it into the casting for one groove. You would then run that through the barrel several times then shim the cutter to go slightly deeper and repeat that till you got the depth you wanted. Thats just one groove it all had to be repeated for each groove.Odd that boring out cost less. I would imagine it to be more work. Less precise work, but more work nonetheless.
@wayne estes has a woodsrunner brand new never shot in 50 smoothie ready to sell. PS it came from Kibler that way too.One of the thoughts in the back of my head is to buy a spare Kibler SMR .36 barrel and have Mr. Hoyt bore it to .40 smooth.
However, before I do that I would get a new Woodsrunner kit in .45 and turn it into a smooth .50.
So many ideas!
My Chambers 54cal/28g smooth rifle kit.Jim Chambers has a smooth rifle kit
Yep. For much of American history, 50 cents was between 1/3 to 1/4 of an average day’s wage. And that would be 10hr days.50 cents was a bit of money for a cash poor society. I’m happy if I find a dime…..![]()
In Leonard Reedy's journals he also lists the payments he received. Much of it was in barter, everything had a value and labor which is usually listed as $0.50 a day. The one value I would like to find that the journals don't list would be what a jug of liquid corn would be worth?Yep. For much of American history, 50 cents was between 1/3 to 1/4 of an average day’s wage. And that would be 10hr days.
Liquid corn must had some decent value. It’s one of the first things Congress wanted to tax.In Leonard Reedy's journals he also lists the payments he received. Much of it was in barter, everything had a value and labor which is usually listed as $0.50 a day. The one value I would like to find that the journals don't list would be what a jug of liquid corn would be worth?
I wish I could. My blackpowder budget is a bit light at present.It was just laying there and you had to pick it up…. Puns are for scoundrels and neer-do-wells!
Yes but we need recall that much of life went by barter. A man could be wealthy, owning a large home, and good farm wear nice clothes and have a ‘fat wife’ and strapping children and not see ten dollars in cash per year.Liquid corn must had some decent value. It’s one of the first things Congress wanted to tax.
Kibler offers a Colonial in .58 cal. smoothbore .One of the thoughts in the back of my head is to buy a spare Kibler SMR .36 barrel and have Mr. Hoyt bore it to .40 smooth.
However, before I do that I would get a new Woodsrunner kit in .45 and turn it into a smooth .50.
So many ideas!
Oh I do agree about the barter and trade side, but I don’t thing the Federales would be happy if you paid your liquor tax with eggs and chickens.Yes but we need recall that much of life went by barter. A man could be wealthy, owning a large home, and good farm wear nice clothes and have a ‘fat wife’ and strapping children and not see ten dollars in cash per year.
At rendezvous a man got a chit of his wages that might be over a grand and he bought his needs at high mountain prices. And if he had money left over it was just company credit
Whiskey was bartered and used in addition to pay for farm hands in SW Pennsylvania in the 18th Century.In Leonard Reedy's journals he also lists the payments he received. Much of it was in barter, everything had a value and labor which is usually listed as $0.50 a day. The one value I would like to find that the journals don't list would be what a jug of liquid corn would be worth?