Not the same rifle as you're asking about, but rather a Sitting Fox kit "Late Lancaster" built by TVM. So this may or may not help you any. Mine is a 42" straight octagon 13/16" Long Hammock barreled flinter with a cherry stock. As to handling, I just weighed it on my bathroom scale, and it is somewhere between 7.5-8# according to that scale, but feels somewhere between 6.5-7#. The stock is simple, with no patchbox, no carving, and the furniture being German Silver. The rifle feels great, and shoots great, but does not shoot any better than my CVA St. Louis Hawken or my GPRs. It is muzzle-heavy though, and while it feels well balanced, it is not one that is built for a fast swing like a fowler would be, and it just hangs on target almost by itself. The quality of the work on mine is great, but like I said, it is plain without any carving or anything that would make me hesitate taking it into the woods. It has worked great on squirrel, rabbit, and coyote. I am tempted to take it after turkey one of these days, and have considered taking it after hogs after seeing how it performed on coyote. Quieter than a .22LR, recoil is almost non-existent, but with 20grs of 3F the tissue damage is like a .22Mag. I don't find it any harder to load, clean, etc than any of my larger bores, but I also don't get in a hurry when hunting, weather that is with a ML or anything else. As to things I would change, I can't really think of anything while maintaining the .32 caliber. I do however want a long rifle (not sure if I want it smooth or rifled yet, or maybe both) some day in the smallest outside diameter barrel with a .54 hole running down the center for the sake of I just like .54s, and to have one that is as light as possible. As it is, I get the benefit of a long sight radius, a rifle that feels and shoots great, in a very economical and gentle to shoot caliber, but it does get a bit heavy after walking 10 miles with it without a sling.