A buddy of mine wants to get involved with building an older, unfinished kit. It looks like it might make a good first rifle if some of the inletting can be over come. The rifle uses a hooked breech & tang system.
From what I can see the problem is due to improper inletting right where the octagon part of the tang stops and the "tail" begins. This tang is straight just like the Thompson-Center rifles.
Rather than have an unsightly gap with the inletting, could a different design tang be used? Some of the tangs I've seen start out wide where the tail starts then the tail gets slightly narrower.
I don't know who made the kit, but he got it dirt cheap (40 bucks from his cousin). I told him just to build it as is to see if he likes muzzleloaders, or see if he can get his money back. As a last resort the stock could be used for firewood.
Regarding the use of a tang with a wider "tail end" to try and correct the inletting, I think it might be more problem than its worth especially getting the breech hook to fit properly then getting a tang the correct thickness so everything else fits too ( hammer & nipple position, barrel retention,etc.)
What advice do you think I should give him?
Thanks,
Martin