Good on ya for making a rifle shootable again.
That usually happens when a message is delivered as a belittling barb. Others mentioned that there were other ways to do things but stopped once it was apparent the "damage" had been done. Not you. You sat in the corner and sniped, shot one liners when he tried to explain and asked how you came to your conclusions, especially when they differed from observations he made of the actual rifle.My message went right over your head.
Making it safe and shootable is one thing.Good on ya for making a rifle shootable again.
Ok, be honest. How much would you have paid me to have the rifle as it was before I worked on it? I know this is about history rather than money but since you brought up dollar value, I would like to know your estimate of what it was worth (to you, at least) then, and now. I suspect not very much either way, and I have about $425 invested in its "restoration" to shootable condition.This conversation reminds me of a classic “Antiques Roadshow” episode that went something along these lines; a fellow brought in an original 18th Century Chippendale Highboy (or something like that) which he “restored” himself, he proudly explained. If looked very nice, all clean and shiny.
The good news was that he now owned a nice $3,000 antique cabinet.
The bad news was that he originally had a $300,000 period piece of American furniture.
I checked back to see if Meriwether had fulfilled my request to close my account and in the meantime got some photos in the daylight. Since he has not yet, might as well post them for further ridicule before I go.
Genuine, homemade ferric nitrate stain, blushed with a non-correct electric heat gun, two coats of drying oils. Still needs some screw heads shaped and darkened, all the brass nails cleaned up and installed, some patina put on the brass in the spots where I had to remove it, and some darkening done to the appropriate areas and especially to blend the Acra-Glas fill into the wood around the lock plate, barrel breech, and front bit of the tang.
Just to tee-off the purists (not really, but it no doubt will) I coned the muzzle with a boring bar with the bore center itself indicated true on both ends via 4-jaw chuck and outboard spider (it was pretty deeply and deliberately if not very accurately coned to begin with) and installed a stainless-steel TH liner....with a screwdriver slot in it.
I know the browning touch up on the top and right barrel flat and tang sucks because it's way too smooth and light so I will redo it with LMF rust-pit-in-a-bottle so it woll better match the 200 years of crusty rust on the rest of the barrel that I was actually quite careful to preserve.
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I think it was beyond being preserved as an Ohio rifle as it was hacked up long ago, the perc. lock was not the original but more of a Hawken style lock slopped together most likely before our time. I'm not butt hurt at all about what he's trying to do and he'll learn something new and useful along the way. Sounds like he's pretty knowledgeable already.Well that's me. overdeveloped sense of self righteousness
So why did you hack this thing to bits if you had no idea what it was? The cheek piece is dead nuts Ohio as is the triggerguard and side plate. Too late now. It's a hacked up piece of accraglassed junk now. Good job.....FUBAR.
Yes!!!!It's intimidating to to know that you can't ask a question or show work without a cadre of Pharisees and Sadducees tearing their clothes. It's his own personal property and I think he did a good job.
I hope your not leaving the forum, some of us appreciate your talents!Do either one of you who have admonished me for the use of the word "restoration" actually fail to understand the significance and meaning of my use of quotation marks around the word in the title of this thread?
Do I need to explain that, or can you figure it out on your own?
Or are you just picking something to throw rocks at like many of the others?
Although, some things are simply too far gone, not really historically significant, or just common; if it was pulled from the foundation of Lincoln's log cabin, you'd treat as a hallowed relic; but the many thousands of discarded 'junkers' are simply that and the owner can do as he wishes.Taint that the truth.
I think hate is a strong word and I appreciate your knowledge and experience on the forum. I don't think they're any "haters" here and love hearing the differing opinions.There are right and wrong ways to do these types of things. What we see here is the wrong way. Views on preserving originals has radically changed since hacker Martin's day. These days we stabilize with out doing any harm. Did you really need a gun to shoot so bad you had to destroy this one?
The proper way would have been to glue wood into the places that need repair. It can be done invisibly, I have done it many times
There was no reason to change out the breech plug with this long replacement. Especially using gobs of black accraglass. Finding another old percussion lock that fit the mortise correctly would have been a good idea, or leave the one on it that is already there chances are it was put there during the rifles actual working life. I don't have any words for globing a new flintlock in with black accraglass that's a new one on me.
You haters just keep hating on me, I'm used to it.
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