Alden said:
Aw, come'on Kentucky, there just no WAY the Italian or Japanese reproduction arms industry could reproduce a 150 year old rifle. Here, let me convince you by saying it in detail...
They couldn't possibly reproduce the special lock, stock, or barrel of an original Hawken -- it would be too difficult and expensive. No-one would ever pay good money for a Pedersoli or Miroku rifle...
:rotf:
Of course this is nonsense. Maybe it was true 40 years ago but who knows. Who cares. We got out of polyester suits and the Arab Oil Embargo of the time too. Welcome to the 21st C.
Heh! Heh! Heh!
BTW the Italians, for the most part cannot (or would not) make an accurate reproduction of a Colt SA or Colt Percussion revolver in most cases. Though by now they may have made more accurate moulds. I used to do repair and other work on these as well both repos and originals.
I don't suppose most people know that the Shiloh Sharps is not a true copy of a Sharps, at least when I worked for them? This was intentional. But then one would have to know where to look I guy or understand what you are looking at. Did you know that Pedersoli copied the Shiloh not an original even down to the intentional "error"?
To understand the reason the Italians would not/could not make an ACCURATE copy of a J&S Hawken one would have to be informed on how guns are acutally made and why or a gunstocker or a somewhat better informed than the average "ML enthusiast" or perhaps with a better eye for detail. Because everything mentioned here is in the details. To some at least they are irrelevant.
Especially is someone's sacred cow is being gored.
To others the rifle is either right or its not. This can be a minor change like the Italian revolvers and the Sharps that does not really mean much (except the Italian Colts did not point the same) or it can be a deal breaker as in a rifle with a 19th c name stocked like a mid-20th c breechloader done by people who saw this as right for people who either did not know any better, did not care or both.
Miroku? Ahh the memories...
I suggest We dig out the Feb and April 1976 Buckskin Report (I just did). Read the letter to the Editor written by Don Lamotte. Its reproduced in the April issue in connection with another "Ultra-Hi" firearm featured in a product report with a 2 piece barrel and other custom features, like the arc welded tang and arc welded underlugs. So far as I know all the Ultra-Hi stuff was Miroku. At least the one Lamotte wrote about was so marked. There were a number of horror stories associated with people importing junk around the time of the Bicentennial of the American Revolution. Selling it as rifles like the Minute Men used or as Brown Bess Muskets (same gun). But you needed to be involved in ML at the time. Subscribing to the Buckskin Report was also necessary since little if any of this saw print in Muzzle Blasts, nothing at all in the modern gun press. I spent a lot of time in the Buckskin Report office, sometimes working sometimes in conversation with John or later Dave. I saw and heard a lot about popular factory mades that would gore more cows.
I think before we start name dropping some might want to do some actual research.
I have a friend who started making MLs in the 1950s. Top of the line maker of the 60s into the 80s.
I was talking to him a month or so ago and he commented on how a customer, as soon as he got the rifle in his hands, know more about it than the guy who built it. Instant experts. They had a ML so they were then experts on MLing. How ignorant they were in reality was something else again.
Dan