- Joined
- Jul 2, 2017
- Messages
- 741
- Reaction score
- 1,417
Zero. I’ve bought 2 kits but chickened out and sold both of them without doing a thing on them.
Ah yes came up with seven I didn’t think of, so twenty fiveI’m 66 and been playing in this since seventeen
Counting them up sounds a tad like a life review
I’m counting eighteen, maybe some ones I’m not thinking of
Seven, but since the Kibler isn't really a "build" but more like an "assembly and finish" it's six. Two Chambers kits on the bench now: colonial pistol in .54 and a Lil' Fella kit for my wife that I'm working into a representative Berks incorporating features from RCA #22 and #28. Have had to set aside several of the kit parts and buy or make replacements to make it a Berks!
As a side note, I'm fortunate to own rifles from some top builders including Dave Person, Larry Williams, and Mike Brooks #288 that has the most beautiful piece of wood I've ever seen. My skills are feeble compared to these guys, but I have sold all my builds except the Kibler, which is my small game rifle.
Picture is Brooks #288. Mike...no one has ever been able to tell me what created that figure and I can't find online pictures of maple with figure like that. I've guessed crotch wood, but would love to know, if you remember that one.
View attachment 262964
I love striped maple, but that is stunningly beautiful!It's stump wood. One of the most stunning I have stocked a gun around. I don't believe the lid is my work. Was that a .69 rifle? I did a big .69 in that kind of wood too.
You guys wouldn't believe how hard that wood was.I love striped maple, but that is stunningly beautiful!
Yes. I have one more piece left.**** Miller wood?
What? Do you know how close to the edge you are right now? You are on the road to having racks line the walls, two plastic garbage cans in the corner of your man-cave, one full of stocks, one barrels. Cigar boxes with parts on every flat surface... turn back. There's still time...Just curious how many muzzle loaders have you hobbyist builders have made? For the non-professionals among you...do you keep all your pieces? Sell or give some away? Have a large collection after many decades at it?
You guys wouldn't believe how hard that wood was.
Now where do we go from here, ma'am?You guys wouldn't believe how hard that wood was.
Enter your email address to join: