Personally, I got fancy maple. It is beautiful. What ever you decide on I don't think you will be happy.I was taking a hard look at the colonial rifle myself and was debating between the Maple or the Walnut stock? What think ye?
Personally, I got fancy maple. It is beautiful. What ever you decide on I don't think you will be happy.I was taking a hard look at the colonial rifle myself and was debating between the Maple or the Walnut stock? What think ye?
I debated the choice between long and hard between the two. In the end, I think it boils down to personal preference. I ended up going with the fancy grade Maple and was quite pleased with the choice. IMO, there is a greater choice of color tone treatments available with maple I ended up going with an Iron Nitrate/Tannic Acid process which produced a dark brown with golden highlights. This satisfied my desire for the darker toned stock, characteristic of walnut. I probably spent more time deciding on this aspect. I was happy with the end result, none the less.I was taking a hard look at the colonial rifle myself and was debating between the Maple or the Walnut stock? What think ye?
Unless you're building from scratch, which I would do with component parts from TVM, Jack Garner, I would hold out for one of Jim Kibler's fowler kits which is reputedly just around the corner. PS. last year I had the privilege of viewing a TVM fowler which had a 5 foot (60") barrel in 16ga, which the new owner will have to wipe the drool off of, LOL!My first build was a Kibler SMR .45 done three years ago over a week at the NMLRA workshop in Western Ky. It was done under the watchful eyes of Jim K. who taught the course! It was very informative for a first time builder (?assembler). Learned a great deal about wood finishing, got the standard maple and with aqua fortis it turned out beautifully. And yes, I learned a lot about draw filing the barrel, filing lock and metal. The Chambers lock sparks like a fiend and the rifle shoots truer than I can. I'm sure his new CMC locks are at least as good. Highly recommended.
Now I want a smoothbore and have been looking at the Chambers kits for a bit more of a challenge, and Kibler hasn't offered one yet. Any suggestions for a smoothbore kit I can use with shot or ball and expand my skills a little?
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