The choice to own an Indian made musket usually addresses one circumstance, costs. With the later being availability.
If you’re a reinactor hoping to have a usable musket that you could live fire, an Indian made musket would be appropriate, and a good choice, however for the reinactor that dives deep into the hobby and wants accurate reproductions and chooses to invest a lot of money into their muskets, i would buy too many of them personally.
As you learn more about the arms, accuracy and facts about each musket, you’ll be disappointed in what you have and end up spending more than you need to.
The Quality issue; Indian made muskets are not high quality, there’s argument to be had here about what a quality musket is. Indian muskets often fail because of poorly made locks. All parts are hand made, replacement parts need to be hand made. I only work on Indian made arms for my regiment. I’ve made mainsprings, resoled frizzens, added integral lugs to bridals because the internals were not steady, made sear springs etc welded and relocated parts. Costs are 25-100 per job. Locks are worth maybe 150-175, so you’ll end up paying the cost of labor and parts for a BMW for working on a Subaru.
Most of the issues I’ve seen on them are poor locks and stocks that are just not well seasoned teak or rosewood, some stocks i suspect are aged too long and crack at the wrist.
Just be wary of the monies invest in them, i wouldn’t go paying $150 for a new hand made mainspring or anything like that, as it will be a sunk cost when you part ways with the musket.
What i would not do !
Do not buy an Indian made musket with the intention of making it better quality, replacing the lock with an Italian or rifle shoppe lock, using casted parts from the rife shoppe or anywhere else will usually not end up working without some expensive customizations.
Do not restock them with pedersoli stocks, this will not work. Restocking them from a blank will run you upward near 800$, unless you find someone generous enough to do the work for gaining experience.
Do not replace the barrel on a long land with an american made barrel, american made barrels are much larger too large for the Indian made stocks. With teak and rosewood stocks, the more wood the better, it reinforces weak areas like the breech and forearm. Drilled area’s on the stocks are often chipped, cracked and split.
Teak stocks don’t finish well, it’s a closed grained wood. Stain often blotches and old need to be very thinned. What works well is steaming the stocks to open the grain and begin staining at around 120 and varnishing or oiling around 150/180. Do not burnish. Wet Sanding even painting on fast drying varnishes works best.
By the time you’ve upgraded your Indian made musket, you’re at the cost of an assembled pedersoli, miroku or rifle shoppe kit.
Keep your upgrades simple and stupid. Recolor and refinish the stock, tune the lock, a stamp or two here and there goes a long way with these Indian made arms.
With that said, i only recommend Loyalist arms they’re great people and will only sell muskets that are good enough to shoot.