Here’s the cheekrest side and a Golcher lock from REDavis.More pics please....I love it.
Don
Here’s the cheekrest side and a Golcher lock from REDavis.More pics please....I love it.
Don
That sure is a purty looking rifle, and really like that patch box! Where is it from?I think you did a great job replicating the latest iteration of a S Hawken halfstock….stock furniture and overall architecture look like what I’ve seen on Sam made guns…. I read your commentary on your stock finish on another thread … apparently you already know.
I’ve observed (from viewing, handling and pictures) that “no two guns are alike”. The “Sam” pattern, like yours, held a style and set of furniture that repeated on a lot of the surviving rifles…thus the ”classic“ Hawken look.
But the early J. Hawken and J&S Hawken rifles vary widely in stock style, furniture and degrees of repair and upgrades….and (subjectively) varying degrees of artistry and graceful execution of a particular rifle.
So if your’e replicating a Hawken, there is enormous room for some personal preferences in stockwood, stock design, trigger guard style, straight breech, slant breech etc….View attachment 203975my lastest attempt …it has the only two piece brass brazed butt plate I could ever find…I wish I had bought 10 when they were available.
Here’s the cheekrest side and a Golcher lock from REDavis.View attachment 204114View attachment 204116Here’s the second to last gun I made…haven’t shot it yet …has a Getz barrel…View attachment 204117These are from scratch guns…I’ve been the luckiest ramrod hole driller that has ever lived…I sweat bullets when I drill a ramrod hole.
Thank you for kind comments.Thanks. Very nice work. My favorite style of rifle.
Don
like your thinking...40 years at bigfork montana on flathead lake...now in arizona on the border...not a light at nite...I feel that what floats your boat is all that matters, if one finds satisfaction in any endeavor, in the 21st century, and some relaxation,pride in going it your way a hearty here here for you and me. I am hunter MT just give us a small widow of opportunity to extend my time trekking around the mountains, and a friend give me a great deal to get back into BP it was meant to be. I don't over think anything anymore, the last 4 plus years in the medical field. Has changed our life's forever. Enjoy smell the smoke, look at a sky so bright it hurts your eyes,get the pride of hitting your mark, take with you what makes you Happy! The dear lord made the earth round so we couldn't see to far ahead, he knew we wanted want to go there.
Mtman725
Maybe to Fred's eyes those letters aren't really that large. After 78 years I find that "shouting" either in writing or in the spoken word isn't really that loud. However, what I am waiting for and what will really piss me off, even worse, is when some twenty-something-year-old tells me he/or she can't read what I wrote because it's in cursive. WZThere are these things.....called lower case letters.
They work really well when placed after the capital letter that's used at the beginning of each sentence.
There's NO NEED TO SHOUT in all of your posts.
Muzzleloading people are not as bad as the HAM radio crowd. Those guys are insufferable"I watched a video by Ethan of “I love muzzleloading.” He talked about the number one obstacle to the growth of muzzleloading for the beginner. To summarize, he boiled it down to too many in the muzzleloading community being a jerk."
When I started learning about muzzle loading I went to the library and checked out books. That is where I learned, there was no www.
Folks can still do that by getting Ned Roberts book, Eric Bye's book, Walter Cline's book, etc. These author's are well respected in their fields. Unfortunately folks come here wanting instant gratification, they do not want to put forth the effort to learn.
I see it all the time here, folks ask where can I buy this or that, how do I do this, etc. They want someone else to tell them versus putting forth the effort themselves to solve their problems.
Jeremiah Johnson was an entertainment movie, not a documentary, accept it for what it was made for.
I have no opinion at all, but Woodfill is kind of the national expert on these things so it would be interesting to see who is correct? (Again, I have no fish in this pond.) Not questioning you at all. It's good people are looking at details anymore in general.I also noted in Mr. Woodfill's Utube video he puts a sharp point on the front of the lock moldings and states that all Hawkens had this. I've seen a lot of photos of original S. Hawken rifles and none of them have this sharp point.
Enter your email address to join: