- Joined
- Mar 27, 2021
- Messages
- 30
- Reaction score
- 34
I haven't laid hands on a Kibler, but I did receive a TVM Southern rifle in December. I have zero complaints about the rifle, and fell the price was fair.
I'm not waiting 18 months for a gun to be built.!With an 18-month wait, and questionable receipt of the said gun, and there’s no way I could tell you to go with the TVM over a Kibler!
I would avoid TVM there’s so much more out there! I purchased two rifles from them one off the shelf and one custom. The one off the shelf is an SMR and a good shooter. I shot it when I purchased it and then put it in the closet where it sat in a climate controlled environment until a few months ago. Pulled it out to play with and the stock was cracked. It shrunk so badly that the butt plate had to be shortened and the stock reshaped to get the butt plate to fit with no tension! Wet wood period! I recently disassembled the entire rifle to check the barrel to see if the barrel tabs were slotted. They we’re not. I also was investigating another crack that appeared but was always there only they hid it. When I removed the barrel the barrel channel was not there the ramrod was in plain sight! From the breach to about 12 inches forward! The rifle stock was cracked when assembled they glued it up but from shrinkage it opened up at the ramrod entry point. Go back and search on my post with this issue which doesn’t include what I have said here. The entry pipe thimbles were blackened but not finished the parting lines are what your eyes see when you look at them. Poor poor workmanship! I opened up the tabs and reglued the existing cracks. The rifle works but wasn’t worth at all what I paid 2400 plus 100 to ship it. I gave them the benefit of doubt entially but it didn’t take me long to figure out they took me! There customer service options if you have a problem will cost you big they take no responsibility. They sound real sweet and concerned when talking to them but in the end it will cost you! That’s the first rifle! The second im not going to get into but worse same shrinkage issues and it was a bobus looking rifle. I gave it to a master builder and had it fixed and carved. Now I have a beautiful rifle! But at the cost of almost scratch built. The most frustrating thing is the name on the barrel! I had it removed from the redone rifle. How anyone could put there name on builds like these. I don’t believe he built them any way the inletting was done by either a beginner or hack. Make no mistake they both looked okay when fully assembled but it is what is under all the furniture, the carving oor inletting and finishing of the furniture where they failed. In addition they have a problem with humidity there and openly admitted to loaning finished rifles to dryer areas that came back after a year and non of the furniture fit the rifle stoc shrunk so bad. I’ve said enough don’t be fooled an heirloom quality flintlock they are not! With what Kimbler is now offering there is no reason to buy anything else! I wish I had the cash id certainly buy his most recent release the woodrunner with a fully carved stock! Absolutely gorgeous imo!Based on the value and quality Jim Kibler offers, I was all set to get a Woodsrunner even though I prefer a barrel longer than 39". All the reviews and videos of building of a Kibler is proof enough they are likely the best deal for an historically correct and gorgeous rifle. I am not at all handy. I mean NOT AT ALL. So I was going to get an "in the white" kit.
Then I happened to see that TVM will make a gun for me completely finished with Siler lock and name brand barrel, custom length and swamped, choice of hardware. Basic Southern has 36 or 42" barrel. The 42 is more aesthetically pleasing at least to me, but 44 would be even prettier, which they offer at extra cost. Choice of wood. Just comparing their basic Southern plain maple or walnut or late PA with Jimr's Woodsrunner or Colonial, a finished TVM rifle is just a tad more money with more possibility to upgrade.
What would you do? Take a look at Tenn Valley Mfg if you haven't seen them. U had one many years agi in .36. The Poor Boy model, no entry thimble, very plain wood, no toe plate. But looked good because of the longer barrel.
All I have now is a Pedersoli GPR flinter. It is so very heavy and doesn't have the graceful lines of a longrifle.
Take the butt plate off and see what is underneath mine was not epoxy it was some type of filler fiberglass I think. Did they remove all the parting lines from the furniture. Did you remove the barrel to see if the barrel tabs were slotted as they should be? Mine is a 40 cal in cherry shoots great but it is not something anyone would buy from me if I pointed out all the flaws.I haven't laid hands on a Kibler, but I did receive a TVM Southern rifle in December. I have zero complaints about the rifle, and fell the price was fair.
I paid 2400 for mine I thought at the time it was fair plus I had the money. You could have a good one but they shortcut everything. They cut the butt on all the rifles they make and use a filler to hold it! I asked them straight up and they said yes. Even I can inlet a buttplate. Then when the wood finally dries is when the fun begins. For a master it should be at most a couple of hours me it probably took a day. But there wood supporting my buttplate not stained bondo or other. The most annoying thing is that inscription on the barrel why did it have to be so deep. On the Virginia I bought it was able to be filed out but on my SMR it almost to the rifling LOL! I have several guys that engraved their names on the rifles but not any where as deep.I haven't laid hands on a Kibler, but I did receive a TVM Southern rifle in December. I have zero complaints about the rifle, and fell the price was fair.
I don't have a Kibler
Mike,I mean although I wouldn't even try to fit parts into wood, I'm pretty sure I can finish the end the white Woodsrunner. Thanks again.
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