I've had a Lyman GPR for over 10 years now. I bought it as a botched kit and kind of refinished it. Worked great as a beater for years and I've gotten a lot of deer with it. It always had this stupid butt pad on it from the original owner, and the stock was already cut a little bit so I didn't want to shorten it any more than it already was to put a nice butt plate on it.
Well the other day a brand new stock with trigger and all furniture came up on Ebay for $170 and I bought it and swapped my lock and barrel over.
Now what to do with the old stock. I hate to just not use it. I already have a GPR .50 with caplock, and a trade rifle in flint lock.
I removed the butt pad and I can see that the stock is cracked a little bit in the back and the only thing holding the cracked piece on is the upper portion of the butt pad. The crack isn't bad, but is definitely there.
I thought about cutting down the stock and get a spare barrel to cut down and make a long barreled pistol (16-18"). The handle angle isn't optimum, but it doesn't seem to be that uncomfortable. Then it might be nice for an accurate deer pistol for those hunts where you walk miles and miles.
Lyman had a fast twist and slow twist barrel. All the pistols that I see are fast twists even though they shoot round balls. If i do cut down the stock to make a deer pistol, does it really matter which barrel I find?
Any other ideas?
Well the other day a brand new stock with trigger and all furniture came up on Ebay for $170 and I bought it and swapped my lock and barrel over.
Now what to do with the old stock. I hate to just not use it. I already have a GPR .50 with caplock, and a trade rifle in flint lock.
I removed the butt pad and I can see that the stock is cracked a little bit in the back and the only thing holding the cracked piece on is the upper portion of the butt pad. The crack isn't bad, but is definitely there.
I thought about cutting down the stock and get a spare barrel to cut down and make a long barreled pistol (16-18"). The handle angle isn't optimum, but it doesn't seem to be that uncomfortable. Then it might be nice for an accurate deer pistol for those hunts where you walk miles and miles.
Lyman had a fast twist and slow twist barrel. All the pistols that I see are fast twists even though they shoot round balls. If i do cut down the stock to make a deer pistol, does it really matter which barrel I find?
Any other ideas?