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New Fowling Piece by Roy Stroh

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jbwilliams3

45 Cal.
Joined
Dec 23, 2006
Messages
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Roy made a rifle for me a few years ago and it is the finest gun I could ever hope to care for. Having sold my only smoothbore flinter, the opportunity came to commission Roy to make a simple fowling piece and I jumped. I was fine with him using whatever was on hand which ended up being a 48”, 14 gauge Charles Burton barrel and a Davis lock which he had left over from a rebuild where the mainspring had broken. He cast all the brass parts. The stock is walnut. Whole thing comes in at under 7 pounds and should be showing up tomorrow. I plan on getting off a few shots when I get home tomorrow before it gets dark!
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That is very sharp! I love the finish (or lack thereof) on the metal and the color of the stock. My smoothbore has a muddy dark stock, and dark brown metalwork. Yours is exactly how I wish mine looked!

Hope you enjoy shooting it as much as we do looking at it!
 
That is very sharp! I love the finish (or lack thereof) on the metal and the color of the stock. My smoothbore has a muddy dark stock, and dark brown metalwork. Yours is exactly how I wish mine looked!

Hope you enjoy shooting it as much as we do looking at it!
You can always take some steel wool or scotchbrite pads to your metal work.
 
A grand looking gun, JB.

The toe looks a tad long, but you will know how it fits you better than me!
I know it sounds Irish, but if it shoots too high, get the toe shortened a bit...

Just received from the postman. Fits like a glove, but then again, I'm not a good enough shooter to fuss over minor fit variances. Only ever had one gun which I felt I couldn't shoot well because of the measurements. Ever see the Bumford gun? Long toe on that one.
 

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JB,

Yes, I've seen a few Bumford guns back in the UK. Have a few saved with ideas "one day" to make a copy.

Have a barrel as well by Thomas Bannister, (Late 1600's up to 1707 ) Very fond of these early guns!

Yes, the toe is long on the one you show, but with having less drop at the heel, the buttplate still looks square, or a right-angle.

I am very pleased it fits you well, as that is The most important thing!
Congrats, and keep us posted when you get to try it out.

All the best,
Richard.
 
JB, that looks quite a lot like a fowling piece I commissioned from Roy years ago. Absolute delight to shoot, and everyone who handles it falls in love with it. I've got two of Roy's guns, and couldn't be happier with both of them (the other is a .45 Southern "Poor boy" rifle). I've gotta say, though, that the fowling piece is almost always the one I grab. Just love that gun! Good choice on the length, too!
 
JB, that looks quite a lot like a fowling piece I commissioned from Roy years ago. Absolute delight to shoot, and everyone who handles it falls in love with it. I've got two of Roy's guns, and couldn't be happier with both of them (the other is a .45 Southern "Poor boy" rifle). I've gotta say, though, that the fowling piece is almost always the one I grab. Just love that gun! Good choice on the length, too!
He built the rifle in my avatar too. Boy, this fowling gun is a delight to carry. So nicely balanced. I had a 28 gauge that was about an inch shorter and I thought it was as good as it gets. This one handles even better.

I'll be doing some more shooting this weekend and get a better idea of what she prefers. I didn't have time to do much more than play around with a few shots last Saturday. Had a lot of fun though!
 
You can't go wrong with a firearm built by Roy Stroh. I've had the proud ownership of the first Jaeger he built for the past, gee, must be closing in on a decade or thereabouts. Definitely one of my favorite longarms, and I've got LOTS!
 
Roy Builds a Fantastic gun, I have a beutiful gun from him myself. 48" barrel, cherry stock beutiful lines! weighs just a shade over 6 pounds. Is amazingly comfortable with heavy loads and doesnt beat you in the face. Loading can be interesting when at the range cuz the barrel is so blasted long..
 

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Yeah, that yankee Roy Stroh builds an OK gun. I guess...………...yawn...……….Now for the truth. Got me the first jaeger he built, a .58 (or thereabouts) and it's just the cat's meow, I love it to death. Along with that, my Brooks fowler (.20 gauge) and my super-simple (doesn't even have a patch box) K L Moors .50 cal rifle and I don't even need any other Blackpowder longarm. NOW back to that beautiful fowler Roy built you. I just KNOW it will be perfect and everything and more you will want from such a piece. Don't be surprised if, after shooting it and shooting it and shooting it you get really honest with yourself and face the fact that you just won't need anything else. I kinda envy you for all the fun you'll have familiarizing yourself and bonding with that wonderful firearm the next year. Have a great time!
 
One thing that stands out about Roy's builds is their " organic sleekness", something that was often seen on originals but seldom seen today.
 
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