Everett had a set of Hawken parts from "Cabin", perhaps Log Cabin, he wanted put together. I started August 18 and got done today, 113 hours. The parts may have come from the Hawken Shop. There was an inletted stock ($232 present cost). Nothing was done to the barrel, which was a .50 caliber Green Mountain which he waited about a year for, wanting a .54, but had to settle for the .50. I had a premium (as checked with a bore scope) .54 Green Mountain 1" x 36" so traded him and cut it to 32". The Hawken tang has a funky snail like the Hawken Shop's, kind of flat in front. The guard was attached to the trigger plate, correctly and as I do it. The stock was too thin across the forearm, measureing about 1.350" wide. The escutcheon inlets were too deep, I had to paper-shim the escutcheons flush with the wood. Otherwise good. I fitted the breech plug and attached the underrib with rivets. He wanted a correct Hawken but different. I used a brass butt plate I had and made a brass toeplate and brass lockbolt escutcheon, like some originals. He wanted the escucheons left in the white with brass keys. I also left the nose cap and entry pipe in the white. He wanted the steel parts heat blued and the barrel cold blued, which I did with Brownell's Oxpho blue. The stock was stained with a mix of Lincoln dark brown leather dye (too black) and Fiebing's leather dye (more red). The finish is five coats of Track of the Wolf's Original Oil (linseed oil) finish. Here it is compared to another one I built from Track's parts on the bottom (which is excess to my needs, GRRW .54 barrel).
He wanted this adjustable rear sight, which I have little use for. It is a better one than came from Track, having a bigger dovetail to hold the sight better.
I tried five different patch materials, some loaded too hard and some blew apart. Even so, they shot with fine accuracy (less the two right ones).
The rear sight was too tall, had to file a deep notch, but I tried it at 100 yards on this used target and found that it shot at least as good as the guy with a high-powered scope and probably a 7mm mag. (All scopes are high powered any more!)
Everett will use this to hunt elk the first part of November.