During my recent elk hunt in the Uintah Mountains, I fell and broke the toe off the Hawken I'd built. I had brought my .54 caplock engraved Hawken along as a second rifle so was able to hunt the next day. We saw only five elk, I had no chance to shoot.
The steel buttplate bent forward and chipped the toe off. I'd fitted the toeplate with 1/4" screws, don't know why, I have always used about 1/2" screws before.
I pounded the butt plate back to a close fit and glued the toe on with Titebond II glue.
I used a 3/4" screw in the rear toeplate, a 1" in front and a 2" one in between. Have 3 or 4 or 5 more Hawkens in process now (I kind of lose track), and will use these reinforcing screws in them.
Here is what I put in the patch box. A ball puller, a patch worm, a .58 cleaning jag and a .40 cleaning jag. This last is to reach into the powder chamber of this hooked flint breech plug.
This allows cleaning the powder chamber without losing the patch. If I do, the patch puller will also screw into the .58 cleaning jag.
So after the repair, I hunted another day and again saw no elk. But it was a good day in the woods. I have to fit the buttplate better, stain the joint and then I think I'll sell this rifle. It is too long and heavy for me to hold off-hand, and I've got two more fullstock .58's I want to build. If I hunt elk next year, it will be with a shorter and lighter rifle I've built. Maybe a .58 halfstock flintlock?