Well - It's not American, nor is it a Longrifle, but it's a flintlock pistol that isn't often seen these days, so I'm sharing my latest project off the bench.
This is a Queen Anne pistol built from The Rifle Shoppe castings that I picked up from Selinda Kennedy a few years ago. There were two frames, one that had some work done to it, and a blank. I started over with the blank frame castings and assembled this piece in a few weeks back before Dixon's. The Rifle Shoppe castings for this project were "mid range" as far as how much cleanup and file work was involved to put the frame together. A lot of precision hand machining is involved with a set of parts like this, especially considering the shrinkage involved when duplicating parts from an original pistol (I held my breath as I drilled through the pan bridal and frizzen in one move!). The triggerguard slides forward to lock the tumbler when in half cock, then pops back by hand to put the gun into full cock. Dave Rase helped me mill the barrel on his lathe - thanks again for all the help Dave, I'm sorry I couldn't make it up to the WHGG show this weekend! Steve Colward also helped me a lot by sharing some photos of the inside of his original Queen Anne pistol.
The carving design is borrowed from an original silver-mounted pair of QA pistols I found on an auction site, but is unusual for a Queen Anne in that it's not the standard symmetrical English "shield" style carving. I chose to go with a slightly longer barrel as well for this project - It's 6.5" long and .54 smoothbore, and the frame is drilled for a fixed 20 grain charge. The engraving is all of the original design, but most of it was recut since cleaning the castings removed most of the engraving. The buttcap is a portrait of Acer
. The frame and stock were finished with a slight patina. I'm going to adjust the countersink and make the bolt anything but perpendicular to the barrel.
Lastly, I realized upon looking at this sideplate (and many original identical Queen Anne sideplates), that this casting was the same exact design and size as the sideplate on many original English pistols of the same period. This one simply has the front bolt portion lopped off so it fits on the Queen Anne frame.
As always, any constructive critique, comments, and questions are welcome.
-Eric