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FOR SALE Colonial Rifle

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Dphar1950

40 Cal
Joined
Sep 1, 2019
Messages
312
Reaction score
220
50 caliber.
Slightly curly maple. Kibler's standard.
Weight about 9 pounds. Pretty dense wood.
Ferric Nitrate stain.
Finish is a traditional shop made linseed oil varnish, shop boiled oil with driers and Gum Benzoin and Rosin added to improve water resistance. 4 (?) coats with rotten stone rub at the end. All wood surfaces coated even the RR hole.
No engraving other than barrel is signed.
Incised carving on buttstock and forend, relief around the barrel tang and lock panels.
Pattern behind the cheekpiece is from a Haymaker rifle.
Rifle was sighted for windage and is just slightly low at 25 yards with 70 gr of FFF, .490 ball and heavy linen patch with tallow. Left it a little low so the new owner can adjust. Has had a proof load and 17 rounds fired. I shot 10 rounds for fun. Shoots one hole at 25 yards rested.
43 3/8” barrel.
Lock plate and cock have been case hardened with Kasenit and left as they came from the quench. All lock parts other than the Cock and frizzen are precision machined from bar stock.
LOP is 14".
Trigger weight is about 3.5 pounds as the lock came. Nice trigger.
Finished it to be a 1760s-70s working rifle. They were, after all, usually carved to some extent. So I put some on it.
$2500 postage paid in original Kibler box.
Track of The Wolf just sold one for more with no carving And not signed by the maker.
Can take more photos if needed. Stock is fairly dark in some lighting, lighter in other.
Finished as new, browned barrel, polished brass.
I liked it so much I have one started for me but with more and different decoration.

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Nice! I learned basic carving, but have always been too scared to put it on an expensive curly maple stock.

I have been doing gunstock carvings, inlays and checkering for 45 tears. Get a good set of chisels, keep them nice and sharp and jump in. Start off with small easy patterns, You might surprise yourself.
 
If you can find it Wallace Gusler has a video on carving using the stabbing technique to lay it out. You need a selection of gouges for this but its more controllable than a V gouge or knife. Though I use both in some areas and used a V gouge for all on this rifle. Basically because I had not done it before. Here is a photo it and another that I am planning on keeping for myself, its a 54 caliber. I has relief carving and some engraving.
If you are going to do carving. Get some books, “Rifles of Colonial America 1 and 2” are excellent as they show multiple views of rifles and you should be cable to get them through inter-library loan. Learn to draw the patterns and ignore much of the modern interpretations that are often too complex.and things you see on furniture from later periods. Its usually wrong. Looking a photos and then drawing it on a sketch pad with a buttstock outline draw on it is GREAT Practice and will acquaint you with the art much better than tracing.
The rifle with the relief carving, hunters star and engraving is not for sale.

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Nice! I learned basic carving, but have always been too scared to put it on an expensive curly maple stock.
Kiblers longrifles sells practice pieces for carving. Some lumber yards sell hard maple by the board foot. A piece of 1 x 6 or 2 x 8, while flat would give you something to practice on that is much cheaper. Also vendors that make precarves often have scrap stocks they might well a buttstock off of which will then give you the curves and such, you don’t have to practice on a “real” rifle stock.
 
50 caliber.
Slightly curly maple. Kibler's standard.
Weight about 9 pounds. Pretty dense wood.
Ferric Nitrate stain.
...,
$2500 postage paid in original Kibler box.
..,

Please ad a photo of the piece and a piece of paper with your screen name and the date of the photo. Thanks

LD
 
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Sure came out dark this time. But its night time and the light not as good.
 
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