Halftail said:I saw a post where someone mentioned Thompson Center had been manufacturing Muzzleloaders since sometime in the 60's.When did they start for sure?Anyone know?
Randy Wakeman said:Thompson entered the firearm market in 1965 with Warren Center's Contender, and did not produce a muzzleloader until their strange interpretation of a "Hawken" rifle appeared in 1970.
gmww said:Thanks for the Link Musketman. I know you weren't slamming T/C.
FWIW, that's one source I can't/won't read...there seems to be a history of financial motivation for articles, making it impossible for me to know what has credibility and what doesn't...Musketman said:[url] http://www.chuckhawks.com/muzzleloading_babylon.htm[/url]
Walks Alone said::thumbsup: roundball and Pittsburghunter... for the same reasons and more.
As a serious TC Contender user myself getting my first one in 1969 (and also going into the gun business by about 1972), I believe they first entered the public world as a MFG of firearms with the release of the Contender a couple of years before I got my first one (not 1965 as per that article clip). Fjestad also published 1967 as the first production date in his 26th blue book BTW.
As far as the TC muzzleloaders, Norte says in his BP Guide (1969) that at the time he was writing it, TC was "an investment casting firm of considerable repute in the process of developing its first firearm", the Contender, and that "FOLLOWING that item's success", they designed and produced their first muzzle loader - the Hawken Rifle. I have no way of knowing how long it took Norte to write before publishing in 1969, but by his statement the first BP rifle must have been released sometime between the Contender in 1967 and publication in 1969 (or possibly even later) I presume. "Later" because my copy of his book is a 1976 2nd edition that may have been updated.
Obviously, everything published on this topic is not correct, and with the factory fire where records were lost even TC's CS manager (Tim Pancurak) may not try to venture a firm answer.
None of this is documented fact for sure, but I trust what I remember as about right from my own experience and these two sources far more than I do the writings of RW.
IMO - YMMV - FWM
whitetaildg said:Roundball,
What number did T/C start with on the barrels for a S/N number and were the first stocks really pronounced with the drop?
W.T.
whitetaildg said:OK, Roundball
I got some of it, I heard they started with S/N 1000 , What about the stock shape? I have a T/C 45 percussion with a 3xxx S/N on the barrel , and it got the long lop but not the pronounced drop in the stock, what do you make of that?
W.T.
whitetaildg said:Ok, Roundball,
I will agree the stocks started straighting out in the late '70's but this S/N is 3 thousand, with the long LOP! Explain that one!!It has T/C on barrel and is 28 inch long.
W.T.
roundball said:FWIW, that's one source I can't/won't read...there seems to be a history of financial motivation for articles, making it impossible for me to know what has credibility and what doesn't...Musketman said:[url] http://www.chuckhawks.com/muzzleloading_babylon.htm[/url]
MM, just so we're clear, I wasn't being critical, just posting my thoughts on that source... :vMusketman said:roundball said:FWIW, that's one source I can't/won't read...there seems to be a history of financial motivation for articles, making it impossible for me to know what has credibility and what doesn't...Musketman said:[url] http://www.chuckhawks.com/muzzleloading_babylon.htm[/url]
I didn't write the artical, I just found a single reference to the original question on production date, that is all...
I do not endorse Mr. Wakeman's idealistic view-points, the only thing we have in common is our first names: "Randy"...
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