The folks at Muzzleloaders Building Supply have provided me with great service plus they are knowledgeable & are located in 2nd Amendment friendly Idaho !!!
Hi colimr- thats a very good question. I have been thinking about it and just would say that I work from the heavy areas towards the thin areas. On these I always do the lock first since the mortises are cut, then do the barrel so I can align it up with the pan. After that I usually work on the butt and then the fore stock, followed by shaping the front of the lock panels and moldings which go last. I really cant say exctly why... I spend a long time just looking over the blank and imagine what I want to do with it.Pathfinder may I ask, does your skill as an artist influence what you have been doing during this build ? You seem to approach each step in a more creative thought planned manner more then a average builder .When I build I concentrate on function and dependability my builds look off the shelf but yours I would give my eye teeth to own
UInteresting idea! Anyway its brass so the silver would be kind-of wonky. I do like your creativity.Consider using the handle off a fancy solid silver antique silver tea spoon, this is what I used for thumbpieces' back when I was building. Sometimes the spoon-end would serve as a nice butt cap. A good selection was usually available at antique shops, this was before the internet & ebay.
relicshooter
The "Sparrow" pistol kit from MBS arrived today. Everything looks good and like a straight-forwards kit build... Except for one little thing.. the Butt Cap!
I am imagining how I will go about installing this diabolically grinning butt-head. I know in-letting it will be painstaking and that's ok. But that casting stem sticking up out of the bowl needs to go (these caps are screw-attached with one passing through the mask's mouth into the stock) and I have no idea how to do it. I imaging cutting as much as I can get to with a small hack saw and then using a small ball grinder perhaps? I'm just guessing here.
If anyone has done one of these could you give some hints as to how the best way to approach it would be?
Muchly appreciated,
Bob
MBS calls this pistol the ‘Sparrow’ due to its similarity to one used by Captain Jack Sparrow in the ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ movie.What is the Sparrow?
Very excellent story especially with the nice pictures. Thanks for sharing.For the finish I am planning to finish it like I did the French Dragoon, which was a few hand-rubbed BLO applications and after thoroughly drying, applying a satin wiping varnish. I am excited with how it's coming along
Thanks Polecat_Tom !Thank you for taking us on the journey of this build. You do fantastic work.
Very happy you like these short update photos. I wanted to take more but I always forget to LOLVery excellent story especially with the nice pictures. Thanks for sharing.
There are a few oh-oh's but not as many as I expectedIt looks good, in fact better than good, it looks great.
Colimr, I really appreciate your interest in this build!Pathfinder while many here have followed this adventure with admiration and some excitement as to your progress I must ask when you finally fire this sparrow will it be an anticlimactic end ? What I mean is firing it the end of this chapter or have you got plans for another project, a canvas, that will put the artist to the test or is this the end ?
That is so gratifying to read, thank you Rich44!What a great job you are doing. I really like the pictures, but most important you share the thoughts and direction of your mind and why. A lot to learn from you.
Absolutely fantastic job,,,,,, again.I decided not to use any stain on this stock but allow the natural colors to show. The Black Walnut got an application of Boiled Linseed Oil two days ago and I have been rubbing the it a lot with a white 3M pad, making it really smooth. After I can smell no trace of the oil (meaning it's gassed-off) I will start with some wipe-on varnish. I would like a somewhat glossy finish on the piece.
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