I'm 74+ yrs. old. I started building longrifles in about 1972. My skill set developed rapidly , due to the folks around me. Guess I was blessed with a partial photographic memory, "monkey see , monkey do" level. Any way , I can't tell any one what gun is right for them , but only , what I used over the years. About 1974, my first long rifle , for me , I scratch built that one from a Fred Miller longrifle pattern taken from an original Daub longrifle , mixed with influence from an original Beck rifle . The rifle was for hunting, and competition at the many local shoots of the day. It employed a 44 " Getz "D- WT. T and Flaired .50 cal. barrel. I was young and strong then , and the rifle weighed about 9 lbs. , perfect for a guy able to heft it. I learned most of what needed about a true long rifle from that gun. Long barrel , sights far apart , flint lock .490 r/b , 80 gr. FFFG, amazing accuracy. Got too old for competition,and Eventually, Fred cut several Jager patterns which I experimented with , while getting older , again using Getz .58 , and .62 barrels. My all time favorite caliber turned out to be the .62.. I shot a number of spot and stock flintlock deer with a .62 Jager rifle, and one day Fred had just been to an auction sale. He bought a box lot of m/l stocks and parts. In the mess was a muddy coated short barrel long rifle stock. Being filthy enough that the figure in the maple wood was invisible , and he not wanting to bother with it, he handed it to me saying , put this into the wood stove. I spit on the muddy wood , rubbed the mud away , and asked if it could go home with me? Got it home, washed off the mud, and was thunderstruck. The wood was a combination of tortoise shell , and birdseye maple. One of the most wonderful stocks I had ever held in my hands. The barrel channel was 1 " and 37 " long . Adding another inch to it made it 38" , Perfect for a .62 cal. by 1" longrifle for deer. It too was a tack driver that killed any deer you shot at. The shear beauty of the wood in the rifle made me love it. It weighed in at a hair under 8 lb. . Now , due to old age , I am back to a 6.5 Lb early Lancaster copy of a Valentine Fondersmite longrifle , Colerain .50 , 7/8" straight oct. barrel . The wood is light in wt. , White maple chosen to keep the over all rifle weight to minimum. I'm thankful to be able to have a fine rifle like this one , to finish out my hunting years. ........oldwood.