View attachment 242797
Here is my left handed Tingle. I’m a righty but couldn’t resist it at a bargain price at a gun show a few years back. It also is .45 and must be set to cock.
wow I love that! Let me know if you ever get tired of her
View attachment 242797
Here is my left handed Tingle. I’m a righty but couldn’t resist it at a bargain price at a gun show a few years back. It also is .45 and must be set to cock.
I would agree with that. It looks very traditional. I like all kinds of muzzleloaders, but “plains rifles” and plain old mountain rifles are the ones that really get my attention. These were the last holdouts, as far as muzzleloaders were concerned, overlapping in time with early breechloaders.That is a very good looking rifle. It looks like an original late plains rifle.
Hey, sorry, not sure how I missed this until I was reminded about this thread in another.Could you show the right side of the stock? The pawn shop gun I viewed had a "scoop" in the cheek piece area rather than a carved standing proud actual cheek piece. From what I could see in your previous photo of the right side, it appears smooth with no cheek piece or scoop. Just curious. Additionally, the 1862 serial number is about 600 higher than the pawnshop gun---makes one wonder how many rifles did Mr. Tingle produce in addition to the other guns he built.
I have s/n 1892. @Kansas Jake has the 600s gun.On the top flat of the rifle, I can see in your originally posted pictures, "No. 1892 (which I misquoted as 1862). Is there another number in the 600s someplace on the gun you are describing as the serial number?
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