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WITHDRAWN Reduced .50 Southern Mountain Rifle

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Reduced again. This ones genesis is unclear. Either the builder used Dixie Tennessee Mountain Rifle hardware or started with a Dixie Rifle and made significant upgrades. The 41" barrel is a custom .50 with 1:66 twist. Bore is very good with some dust. The lock is similar to, but a little larger than the NOS Dixie lock I have. (Note: Some photos before broken frizzen spring was replaced). Set triggers definitely Dixie style. Stock is typical SMR, so hard to tell. Atypical of the Dixie rifles, this one has an oval patchbox and steel nosecap. Overall the rifle is in excellent condition. Negatives: The frizzen has been repaired and sparks well. Rifle comes with spare frizzen already hardened and fitted to lock. Small crack at lock screw. Weighs in at about 9 lbs. $700 + Shipping.


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A note on this one. You set trigger before cocking, another indication it is a custom gun.
View attachment 273208

just curious what you mean by you set the trigger before cocking. I never do it that way… but all my rifles can be set before or after. My CVA rifles and my semi custom from TVM can do it either way. Do you mean this rifle can’t be set after cocking?
 
If it is like one of mine (not a Dixie), you can't **** the gun, half-**** or full-****, without setting the rear trigger first. ODD at first, but you get used to it. Set the rear trigger, go to half-****, prime or cap, then stay there until a shot is needed. Go to full **** and fire. The half-**** notch is hell for strong, so it is "safe."

ADK Bigfoot
 
If it is like one of mine (not a Dixie), you can't **** the gun, half-**** or full-****, without setting the rear trigger first. ODD at first, but you get used to it. Set the rear trigger, go to half-****, prime or cap, then stay there until a shot is needed. Go to full **** and fire. The half-**** notch is hell for strong, so it is "safe."

ADK Bigfoot
What he said. One less part in lock, whose name escapes me now. My brain is working on another problem at the moment.:p
 
just curious what you mean by you set the trigger before cocking. I never do it that way… but all my rifles can be set before or after. My CVA rifles and my semi custom from TVM can do it either way. Do you mean this rifle can’t be set after cocking?
It’s actually the trigger that determines this. Single lever vs double lever.
The only issue in the lock would be if the fly was present. This lock originally had a fly, unless it was lost on disassembly.
The fly prevents the trigger lever from catching the half **** notch on its way down when fired…a single lever doesn’t rebound as fast so it stays out of the way. A double will catch.
The single lever just needs to be set to make sure there’s no pressure on the sear arm as you go to full ****.
Triggers look original and I thought they had a double lever trigger as I recall but they could have been swapped or I could be wrong.
 
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