zimmerstutzen
70 Cal.
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2009
- Messages
- 5,848
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Someone said, let the pros do it. Not a bad thought. However, that isn't what the love of muzzleloading and buckskinning is about. if you are intimidated by the task, sure let a pro do it. I, however, figure the pros learned to do it, they are not rocket scientists, so I figure I can learn to do it. There is some specialized knowledge required, sometimes just learning a few tricks. To learn the proper way to cut threads, I bought two books, Learned about how taps are made, how they work, what lubes to use and when. how to care for them. The sum total of that takes up about 6 pages of a book. First I tapped a hole for a tang bolt to thread into a trigger plate. Since it was at a slight angle, it was actually harder than I thought when I did it, and it worked beautifully. I drill the barrel breech with a brace and bit.
I have a small farm. I can't afford to pay a pro to do every task. you look it up on the net, study it, or find a book and study, then go ahead and do it. Worst that can happen, is that you will have to pay a pro if you failed. I needed a few trenches for water and electric lines. Contractor wanted $4,500. Heck I bought a back hoe for $2700, did it myself, and I still have the backhoe for future jobs and clearing snow from the lane. IMO, a buckskinner celebrates the adventurous independent nature of our ancestors with a "can do" attitude. Not a can't do.
Now, I wouldn't attempt brain surgery, but I give injections, and do minor surgery on animals. Learned to trim hooves and shoe horses. Tune the tractor and adjust the knotters on the baler. I,ve made parts from scratch for machinery. Tapping a barrel breech is a piece of cake by comparison. I have made drums and touch hole liners for guns. Made springs, half soled frizzens, tempered springs, forged trigger guards, and even made a jig for routing barrel channels. carved stocks from tree trunks. Even made and hardened screws and bolts. I may not be a master machinist or "artiste" but I can do a job as good as many so called pros. My daughter was taking shop and was intrigued by sand casting, so we made some sand molds, and melted down aluminum cans on the old brick bbq out back, we used an old vacuum for a blower. Didn't even have to study to do that.
Nope, I think the original poster of this thread was right to ask and right to seek the knowledge. Even more right if he actually does it.
if we let the pros do it, we'd still be protected by Red Coats.
I have a small farm. I can't afford to pay a pro to do every task. you look it up on the net, study it, or find a book and study, then go ahead and do it. Worst that can happen, is that you will have to pay a pro if you failed. I needed a few trenches for water and electric lines. Contractor wanted $4,500. Heck I bought a back hoe for $2700, did it myself, and I still have the backhoe for future jobs and clearing snow from the lane. IMO, a buckskinner celebrates the adventurous independent nature of our ancestors with a "can do" attitude. Not a can't do.
Now, I wouldn't attempt brain surgery, but I give injections, and do minor surgery on animals. Learned to trim hooves and shoe horses. Tune the tractor and adjust the knotters on the baler. I,ve made parts from scratch for machinery. Tapping a barrel breech is a piece of cake by comparison. I have made drums and touch hole liners for guns. Made springs, half soled frizzens, tempered springs, forged trigger guards, and even made a jig for routing barrel channels. carved stocks from tree trunks. Even made and hardened screws and bolts. I may not be a master machinist or "artiste" but I can do a job as good as many so called pros. My daughter was taking shop and was intrigued by sand casting, so we made some sand molds, and melted down aluminum cans on the old brick bbq out back, we used an old vacuum for a blower. Didn't even have to study to do that.
Nope, I think the original poster of this thread was right to ask and right to seek the knowledge. Even more right if he actually does it.
if we let the pros do it, we'd still be protected by Red Coats.