Well, I finally did it. After lusting over it for the better part of a year, I finally broke down and bought the Pecatonica Blunderbuss parts set.
http://longrifles-pr.com/blunderbuss.shtml
I'm very new at this muzzleloader building stuff, but I figure this should be a good learning opportunity and might make for a fun winter project. I'm a recovering machinist so I'm pretty comfortable working with metal, but I never have been much of a woodworker. My plan is to use this thread as a "build log" of sorts to detail what goes into building one of these things and the challenges faced by a rank amateur such as myself. This will be the thread I kept looking for before embarking on this project. It will be picture heavy and may include a few videos, but we'll see. I'll do separate posts about the stock, lock, barrel, furniture, and some basic test fitting as I get started. There will be an initial flurry of posts while I document things, then it will slow down and updates will be few and far between as most of my project timelines can best be measured on a geological timeline.
Ok, so first things first... let's see what's in the box!
Stock, barrel, bag o' parts. Simple enough.
I'd asked for a chunk of walnut to test stains and I also received a thin plank of walnut, similar to the maple the barrel is taped to in the image above, but not pictured. That piece of maple will find a home with another project. That's it, other than the mess of styrofoam peanuts and the ramrod.
Furniture, hardware, lock, and ramrod tip & jag. First impression is that it is in fact a complete set of parts but will require quite a bit more fitting work than I was expecting. More on this later.
As you can see, most of this stuff is iron and steel which fits well as I've intended to be a very functional "working" gun, so no inlay or other fancy stuff. This is definitely not going to be davec2's Copy of an original blunderbuss thread, or Noeyebrows' English style blunderbuss build and 4 bore English Blunderbuss is done threads, I simply don't have the skills to match those guys. A mans got to know his limitations.
Next up: The Barrel
http://longrifles-pr.com/blunderbuss.shtml
I'm very new at this muzzleloader building stuff, but I figure this should be a good learning opportunity and might make for a fun winter project. I'm a recovering machinist so I'm pretty comfortable working with metal, but I never have been much of a woodworker. My plan is to use this thread as a "build log" of sorts to detail what goes into building one of these things and the challenges faced by a rank amateur such as myself. This will be the thread I kept looking for before embarking on this project. It will be picture heavy and may include a few videos, but we'll see. I'll do separate posts about the stock, lock, barrel, furniture, and some basic test fitting as I get started. There will be an initial flurry of posts while I document things, then it will slow down and updates will be few and far between as most of my project timelines can best be measured on a geological timeline.
Ok, so first things first... let's see what's in the box!
Stock, barrel, bag o' parts. Simple enough.
I'd asked for a chunk of walnut to test stains and I also received a thin plank of walnut, similar to the maple the barrel is taped to in the image above, but not pictured. That piece of maple will find a home with another project. That's it, other than the mess of styrofoam peanuts and the ramrod.
Furniture, hardware, lock, and ramrod tip & jag. First impression is that it is in fact a complete set of parts but will require quite a bit more fitting work than I was expecting. More on this later.
As you can see, most of this stuff is iron and steel which fits well as I've intended to be a very functional "working" gun, so no inlay or other fancy stuff. This is definitely not going to be davec2's Copy of an original blunderbuss thread, or Noeyebrows' English style blunderbuss build and 4 bore English Blunderbuss is done threads, I simply don't have the skills to match those guys. A mans got to know his limitations.
Next up: The Barrel