I am right handed but shoot long guns left handed due to a vision problem. I have bp long guns both left hand and right handed but can't tell any difference in shooting them. Both work equally well for me.
Thanks for the info! I have been looking at both sites all morning long. hard choice to make.If you don’t see what you want at Pecatonica or Sitting Fox call and ask I know Pecatonica has lots of options not listed on their website.
Keep in mind these parts sets require lots of work and some skill to build. The butt plate cut to close fit at pecatonica is well worth the extra cost and is very close to fitting.
An interesting observation you have! It does not seem to apply for me, but then again shooters do not necessarily experience all shooting the same.Flintlocker
I am left handed and have shot right handed guns all my life. About 15 years ago I got a left handed Benelli shotgun. I was amazed at how much more I could see after the shot, with the gas and empty not blowing accross my face! I believe it is true with flintlocks.
Just my two cents
3 trees
They will take some work as well as research to make them as correct as possible. The stock I got from Pecatonica was a nice piece of wood but I removed a LOT. I also had to deepen the ramrod channel to get the web thinner. One side of the forestock was thicker as well as the butt stock etc. etc. Took me probably 150 hours to build the rifle and I'm new at this and not an expert. I bought the books but what helped me most was the full size plans from Track. (Pecatonica has them.)Thanks for the info! I have been looking at both sites all morning long. hard choice to make.
Many southern mountian rifles were small pea shooters. Down to .28.I'm no expert on Southern long rifles. Weren't most of them smaller calibers? Not many elk or buffalo down there back then.
I have not used a TVM parts set.
I have assembled and finished four Kiblers, two SMR and two colonials. They are the best wood to metal fit available. The locks are now the best mass produced locks. That makes them my first choice if I want a Colonial or SMR. The slight addition cost is of no consequence if you value your time at all.
I have also scratch built about two dozen rifles and several pistols and shotguns. I have also stocked a bunch of modern guns. I have used abuta dozen regular parts sets. Based on my experience I would rather build from a plank than use a common pre carved stock. Precarves range from OK, most are problematical, some are completely unusable. I usually spend more time figuring work arounds for built in errors than the time saved working from a plank. They normally end up with inletting gaps that were not my fault. I have also used some expensive pre carved stocks for firewood. IT is a pig in a poke.
A precarve and parts set will get you a usable rifle. It may have construction flaws and will likely not be historically correct.
IF you want an elk rifle I suggest a Kibler Colonial in 62. That is if you can use the right hand stock. Good luck.
Hi all I am a right hander and i need to shoot with a L/H/ fifle because i don"t know why but i can't close my left eye when i am shooting.I’ve never seen a right hander buy a left handed gun.
Going to throw this out there because the thread seems to have migrated to l vs r. Your eye dominance is more important in shooting than your dominate hand. Check to see which eye is your dominate eye. Fully extend both hands and make a small hole to look through using your hands keep both eyes open and focus on a distant object. Then close one eye then the other you will find that you are actually using one eye to focus on the distant object thats your dominate eye thats the one you should be using to shoot a rifle. A right handed person who is left eye dominate will in the long term benefit more from shooting left handed with a rifle. With new shooters we always check to see which eye is dominant and train them on that eye.
Hi all I am a right hander and i need to shoot with a L/H/ fifle because i don"t know why but i can't close my left eye when i am shooting.
My first kit was appropriately a Kibler rifle. For the next build, I chose a half stock percussion. It is a nice kit but I was not ready for this level. The rifle will turn out fairly good but I should have tried one of the easier track full stock flintlock kits for my next kit; a little more forgiving while learning.I am very close to jumping in with both feet to purchase a kit, but the decision has been a hard one to make. Right now I am trying to decide between a Track of the Wolf Southern Mountain flintlock longrifle vs a TVM Early Virginia kit. I would love to get a Jim Kilber kit but for me I need a Left-handed flint.
I am taking a different route now. Taking a class thru thru The Log Cabin and building from a stock. Learning how to build the whole process. I have gone thru a few class and just having so much fun with it. Also getting to meeting some great people too!My first kit was appropriately a Kibler rifle. For the next build, I chose a half stock percussion. It is a nice kit but I was not ready for this level. The rifle will turn out fairly good but I should have tried one of the easier track full stock flintlock kits for my next kit; a little more forgiving while learning.
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