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I'm with you--never saw a longrifle I didn't like. As for actually shooting, the early Lancasters and the early Lehigh area rifles (Christian Springs, etc) are among my favorites.
That is a great book. Alot of good info in it. I have read and re-read it. But, statistics (and there have been discussions about this here and on other sites with varying interpretations)that I have collected on early "Kentuckies" (American longrifles)indicates that the calibers averaged in the .50s, decreasing somewhat through time. 18th century rifles seem to average about .538 but range from .40s to.70s. If you include younger rifles (from the early 19th cent) the average drops to ~.48 if my memory serves me. Many of the mountain rifles that Cline used were late guns and they were more commonly .30s and .40s.Dave_B said:I've been reading Walter Cline's book, "The muzzle loading rifle, then and now" and I'm really liking the look of some of the early Kentucky style rifles. It looks like many of them were between .36 and .45 caliber.
Dave
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