Some details on this gun.
The stock is a WMC 54cal (1" ATF) I picked up cheap with all hardware. The stock finish was trashed but the furniture was in great shape. I refinished the stock. As it was an early model with wood screws in the tang, I drilled and tapped the trigger guard, and ran bolts through to securely fix the tang to the trigger guard and the stock. Once complete, I stripped the finish with paint stripper, washed the stock off, and dewhiskered it. I glass bedded the tang, especially the area where it butts up against the stock and the trigger guard. I then hand rubbed linspeed oil into the stock, allowed to sit for 12 hours then rubbed the tacky exterior off. Let sit for 10 more, then handrubbed another coat X5. I let it cure for 4 days when the 5 coats were finished.
The barrel was a 26.5" EARLY Renegade barrel in 54 cal. I had Mr. Hoyt, bore out, line and cut it to 21" and cut 54 cal rifling .010 deep with a 1:38 twist. I specifically sent him the bullet I intend to use. No Excuse 485 grain in .541 diameter. He cut the barrel to .540 across the grooves.
When the barrel arrived, I deburred the outside of the muzzle and gave it a through cleaning, dried and degreased, filed any flaws out then gave it several rub downs with Brownell's Oxypho-blue cold bluing gel using coarse steel wool. I then had the barrel drilled and tapped and a firesight ghost ring rear sight mounted 2.5" forward of the breech along with a firesight front in the dovetail that My. Hoyt cut up front. That gives me a 18" sight radius, about the same as a regular Renegade has. You can see in the sight picture the forward screw hole for the original sight placement. It has a too short plug in it; the rear hole had the top of the plug filed flat. I remounted the underbarrel rib by cutting it off and contouring it to be a inch or so short of the muzzle and remounted it into the original screw holes. It leaves a gap before the stock but with the rib cut short of the muzzle it balances the look. It is a hunting gun, not a show piece anyway. The ramrod is untouched and reflects the original length of the WMC barrel.
At this point, the barrel was a little loose in the hook and stock allowing it to rotate just enough so that the hammer would strike the left side of the nipple if twisted that way. I glass bedded the barrel ensuring the barrel was twisted so the hammer would strike the nipple centered and square and set aside to let cure.
It weighs in at 6lbs 10 ozs. 37.5" OAL with 14.25" LOP. Balances in the hand carrying...balance point just forward of the front edge of the lock.
Here are some more pictures. All of the things I did are well within anybody's skill set.
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