I was going to go from pictures for locating sights and rail but would appreciate any help. If someone has one of these and would be able to give me measurements that would be great. Thanks, John.
Re-read and save what Eric said in his post. You have the makings for a very nice rifle. But, some of the steps do require some experience. Fitting the breech plug requires not only experience but some good expertise. Do be sure to consider having this done by someone qualified. Doing it wrong can cause a whole host of problems, including safety. Personally, I would refinish the wood to make it look more like a real rifle than a factory product. Keep us informed of your progress.you have to time the breech plug,
The OP's son posted about these parts last week and contacted Rice, and was told not one of their barrels. The seller said the "R" was for right side -I'd guess to properly account for runout. However, it is my understanding that generally the bottom flat is marked to manage runout...it's clearer what is the barrel's vertical and the mark is not visible on a finished gun.Is that a Rice barrel?
Thanks Eric, that is exactly what I was needing.That is an aftermarket barrel that someone bought for the stock and never put together, even the early TC kits in the white had all the components attached to the barrel. I shudder think of all you will have to do to get the barrel in the stock, you have to time the breech plug, drill and tap for the rear sight and under rib and cut the dovetail for the front sight and wedge pin clevis. You will need a very small bottoming tap for the sight and rib holes.
Here you go; from the factory TC Hawken barrel in my hands right now.
The rear sight is centered 7 1/2" from the back of the barrel with breech plug installed.
The center of the wedge pin dovetail is 8 1/8" from the back of the barrel.
The center of the front sight dovetail is 1" from the front of the barrel
Your under rib and thimble holes are already drilled, you can use these to locate the screw holes for the under rib. It goes in even with front of the barrel.
You may need a TC breech plug wrench to tighten the breech plug, on an aftermarket barrel you may be able to time it (line up the flats) without the gazillion pounds of torque TC put on their factor breech plugs. The plug wrenches come in two sizes; one for 15/16" barrels and a different one for 1" barrels.
Plug wrench, there is a guy making aftermarket ones for about $20, he is usually on eBay but I didn't see his listed.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/1953004583...MdtbyDiSLaGrLmcJLvX0ETUA==|tkp:Bk9SR9Dh2oPsYA
Another thing; all TC factory guns had a bad wood to brass fit except for the patch box.
My bad! Hadn't had the second cup of coffee.The OP's son posted about these parts last week and contacted Rice, and was told not one of their barrels. The seller said the "R" was for right side -I'd guess to properly account for runout. However, it is my understanding that generally the bottom flat is marked to manage runout...it's clearer what is the barrel's vertical and the mark is not visible on a finished gun.
True, but only after checking for any runout between the bore and the barrel’s exterior. Usually not a concern with the newer CNC produced barrels, but a real PIA if not taken into account with older barrels such as this one appears to be.One nice thing is the barrel can be breeched on all 8 flat locations instead of one of 8 since it's new and the sights have not been installed.
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