The range was packed on Sunday. Most shooters I have seen all summer.
Must be the cold weather up here....40 on Sunday morning. :surrender:
Anyway I unpack the first flint lock I ever made..
It's rough and looks OLD :rotf:
So some young guy is shooting his in-line and sees me unpack it, comes over and wants to know how old it is...
I tell him a "few years". well that puts him off his game...
I put it along side my shooting friends modern/military rifles and we go at it..
I can see him looking at it, so he comes over and wants to know if it's a "kit".
Try to explain to someone that has never spent weeks hand inletting a lock,trigger,buttplate,etc.
That this "kit" is not a $100 CVA...
No offence to the CVA builders :v
Like you can buy a CVA kit for $100.
My shooting friends, that think I am weird anyway, were laughting their butts off during this exchange.
They know the work, sweat, worry,that goes into building a long rifle.
I think my shooting friends were waiting for me to hit him over the head with it, but I calmly explained that it was still a handmade rifle, and offered to take the lock off and show him the hand fitting neccessary to make one.
I could understand in an instance why the rilfesmiths of old/new struggle to make a living building flintlocks.
Shooters that have never handbuild a rifle can't come close to understanding the work that goes into them.
Builing from a blank, with parts that are bought from various suppliers, fitting, shaping, and ending up with a workable work of art is truly a fine skill, unfortantly most people just don't get it.
Must be the cold weather up here....40 on Sunday morning. :surrender:
Anyway I unpack the first flint lock I ever made..
It's rough and looks OLD :rotf:
So some young guy is shooting his in-line and sees me unpack it, comes over and wants to know how old it is...
I tell him a "few years". well that puts him off his game...
I put it along side my shooting friends modern/military rifles and we go at it..
I can see him looking at it, so he comes over and wants to know if it's a "kit".
Try to explain to someone that has never spent weeks hand inletting a lock,trigger,buttplate,etc.
That this "kit" is not a $100 CVA...
No offence to the CVA builders :v
Like you can buy a CVA kit for $100.
My shooting friends, that think I am weird anyway, were laughting their butts off during this exchange.
They know the work, sweat, worry,that goes into building a long rifle.
I think my shooting friends were waiting for me to hit him over the head with it, but I calmly explained that it was still a handmade rifle, and offered to take the lock off and show him the hand fitting neccessary to make one.
I could understand in an instance why the rilfesmiths of old/new struggle to make a living building flintlocks.
Shooters that have never handbuild a rifle can't come close to understanding the work that goes into them.
Builing from a blank, with parts that are bought from various suppliers, fitting, shaping, and ending up with a workable work of art is truly a fine skill, unfortantly most people just don't get it.