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Most all Markwell arms are pure junk.
They are cheaply made to function once or twice.
The more modern designs ( percussion ) are made to bypass the restrictions on handguns ( modern cartridge).
They certainly do not represent the era of black powder that we study, practice, and enjoy.
CVA was on the lower scale of quality, as compared to Lyman, Uberti, TC, and similar companies.
Save your money and buy wisely!
Old Ford
I was given a Markwell 45 cal perc Hawken kit years ago. It was very light weight, the butt stock was barely an inch thick, more like a board. The interior lock parts crumbled to bits after about the 4th shot. It was cheaply made, the lock parts weren't properly hardened and the barrel was used to build another gun. Even the word "Junk" IS TOO GOOD FOR IT.
My first muzzle loader was a Markwell kit. .50 rifle of some type. Wood was as described above; narrow, almost like a plank. It did shoot pretty well. I could hit a paper plate at 50 yards. The lock spring broke after 20 shots or so. Gave it to somebody. If I had kept it I would not have continued to explore BP. Junk is a good description.