Billnpatti said:
In my limited experience, the guns made in India look good as long as you don't get up close and personal. Many of them have lock problems that require a lot of work to get them working properly. They seem to be better suited for reenacting than for serious shooting. I know that there are folks on the Forum who will tell you that they have had good experiences with their guns that were made in India but many will tell you that they are not any good. I guess a lot depends on the particular gun that you get, what your purpose for it is and what your standards are and the service that you get from the seller. I must admit that I have heard that the folks at Middlesex Village are good about taking care of the customer after the sale. I don't have any knowledge about the other source that has been mentioned. They may provide good service as well but I don't know. So, if you really do want a gun that is made in India and think it will serve your needs well, I would try to look at one of the guns. Handle it and, if the owner will allow you, shoot it. If you are happy with what you see, I think I might consider buying from MV just on the basis of their reputed good service.
Having said all of that, I still say that if it were me, I'd be looking in the various ads for a good condition used gun like I want that was made by someone like Pedersoli or even a custom made one. I'm still of the opinion that buying a gun made in India is a manure shoot, you may win but, then again......????? :idunno:
If you are handy at all with your hands, there are several places that's offer guns "In the white" for under 2K that all you have to do is to sand and finish the stock and brown the metal parts. Some guns, such as many of the military muskets, do not require that the barrels and locks even be browned. They are usually kept bright and just polished. You can get a smoothie without having to go the Indian made route.
Good luck on whatever decision you come to.
hello everybody!
i stumbled into this thread because of the discussion about india made muskets.
you guys seem to know exactly what you're talking about - but how many of you really handled one of those muskets lately?
are you aware of the fact, that there are not saying many but a couple of different makers in india, most of them producing the same basic line in rock- match- and percussion guns?
i own and shoot three different muskets made in india. all three are great guns, well build and do perform well. on all three i have tuned the lock - yes thats one of the bad things on that muskets, but once you did this, the locks are giving you years of trouble free service.
one of the important points is, here in germany - such guns need to be tested by an offical german proofhouse.
there is a document (besides the stamps on the barrel) that comes with the gun(s) that tells you how this gun was testfired. in the case of my 1730 Long Land Pattern Musket, it was 12 gramm (not grain! GRAMM!) of 2F blackpowder and a 50 GRAMM lead ball.
the guns must fire this 5 times and it is measured after the last shot.
the proofmarks will be stamped on the gun only when everything is OK.
i own a Pedersoli Brown Bess as well. shooting it against my india made LLP they are close, both are good guns, but the LLP is closer to the time period i am reenacting.
i also own a TVLLE de Grenadier - one of the guns made for the Canada Parkservice by Mendi in Spain. nice gun - really, but it has more misfires than the india made LLP.
am i convinced that those are good guns? yes, but as somebody said before, they are exactly what your money is worth. assuming that a Pederoli Bess is about 1100 euros (close to 1500 US$) the india made LLP is just 500€. but you need to know that you're buying a 90% finished kit. if you're skillful enough to tune your india musket it will give you years of trouble free service.
the question i asked was if one of the members here, speaking negative about those india guns, have handled one lately cause of their opinion on those "currys"?
it starts out by simply calling them "india guns" no one would even think about calling all US made guns "american guns" - we all know that there are differences in make, model and quality of making, depending on who made the gun, may it be ravenshear, north star west or, or, or....
same is true for guns from india. DGH was named for example. Dehli Gun House is NOT a maker. its a dealer. same is true for Dixie. so there is no gun made by Dixe - and there is no gun made by DGH - at least not in the last 10 years.
are those guns from india a piece of trash? could easily be. i would like to tell you something. back in 1997 i ordered a US made fowler with nice curly maple stock, L&R Ketland lock, 44" barrel in .62. handmade from a US maker, his name starts with J. (first) B. (last). i spend about 1800DM on it. which was about 1000US$ in those days. plus shipping, plus tax plus custom, it was around 2100DM.
the gun came in the easter week and i was very excited - opened it, put a flint in the lock, and OMG! i have never seen a lock, making so less sparks as this one. it turns out, that this L&R Lock makes good sparks with synthetic flints, not with natural ones.
well if you want to fire such guns here in germany you need to have an official proof on the gun. i drove to the proof house, handled them the gun, ask if i can stay and watch - which i could - they loaded the gun and fired it - and that was the last thing i saw of my gun. it blow up right at its first shot! i was shocked and happy at the same time! shocked cause of the money that just blow up, happy cause the german proof safed my life.
the rest of the story is easily told: i contacted J.B., who had no computer at those days, told him what happends and never heard a word from him.
since then i buy my guns here in germany from german gun dealers, they must (by the law) give you 2 years warranty and the must (by the law) proof the guns by an official proof house at their risk before they can sell you a gun.
thank you for listening,
ike