thats the problem, the haines plans dont have much help for actually building one and in the description it even says theyre to convince people to build one from one of their kits... though the ones at muzzleloader builders supply have some lancaster plans with top views and such, theyre not all that in depth
also finding one in PDF form would help me immensely.. but i guess i could place markers every 10 inches or so and make individual scans of the rifle in sections (considering theyre full scale patterns), then convert the raster image to vectors, clean up in solid works and make printable, accurate templates from them...
but yeah, would really like to find better haines plans, or something very similar in appearance
I make stocks by sawing out the pattern then taking off everything that does not look like the stock I am making. I measure things like pull and drop before cutting the stock or use a known pattern. Cast off as needed is really not measured either its generally determined by how thick the blank is and how wide is the buttplate.
How the the gun measures is really irrelevant. It has to LOOK right for what its supposed to be. Since every one is subtly different blueprints are useless other than perhaps for a stock pattern. Drawings of guns made from kits are a poor reference.
I get the feeling from your posts that musical instruments are made to certain measurements. Long rifles are not, the parts determine a lot of what the gun will be. The position of the ramrod hole can change things from what was planned.
Contours may change constantly over over several inches. No 1/2" section being the same as those on either side. From the front of the lock mortise to the break of the comb is a mass of changing contours.
You would be far better off at this stage to buy a kit from Chambers and make a rifle from it. This will allow you to see what a rifle looks like and gain some experience, if it comes out well you can, if you wish, make money off it and use this to buy more parts. Its a cheap apprenticeship.
The typical gunmakers apprentice spent 3 to 5 years as an apprentice and in Europe at least several years as a journeyman gunmaker, traveling, spending a month or a year in place working and learning then moving on to become well versed in his trade.
Why a Chambers kit? Because some of the precarves on the market will not make a decent rifle and I trust Chambers based on the kit a guy came by with and the two friends have.
If you can get to a class on gun making it will be a great help no matter the style gun being built.
The only stocks I would trust from TOW are the Southern Mtn Rifle and the JP Beck not cut for patchbox.
I used two SMR stocks over the years, one for a brother in law and the other for a project I did with my son and they made into as good a rifle as one could want with allowances for a precarve. But they are only made for straight barrels. I had a rifle in the shop some years back made from the JP Beck and it held well and was comfortable to shoot.
I would recommend you buy or at least obtain through interlibrary loan Shumway's 2 volume set "Rifles of Colonial America" this is about the best for showing several views of the rifle and will give you a better idea of how original rifles looked.
TOW hypes Issac Haines and he was a fine maker. But he was not the only make of fine rifles.
I would also point out that I buy a lot of stuff from TOW and they give good service and have a wide array of parts and a GREAT catalog. But I have a long standing distrust of "kits" and precarved stocks.
Dan