I've been following the posts on here about the Dubbs rifle for some time, so I was basically informed when I met Larry Zornes at the Fort Frederick Market Fair in April. He sold me on a kit which consisted of a Red Brush maple stock precarved in the Jacob Dubbs style, his M&G Continental flintlock, a 41" M&G octagon to round barrel (very thin at the end for an unusually good handling long rifle) and a set of wax molded brass furniture with the ornamentation already molded in. It came with a silver solder-on front sight and a steel rear sight to dovetail into the top flat and a Bivens single trigger.
I've been working on it off and on for a couple months now and have it together, looking good in the white. Test fired it today and fine that it shoots generally to point of aim at 50 yards or so with a bare .61 round ball, but haven't gone to work on that yet. When I finish it I'll try patched round balls of various sizes and see what it likes best.
My dilema for the moment is how or if I should carve and finish it. I'm not a skilled carver or engraver, but have put out some passable items in the past. The real issue is what features should absolutely always been on a Jacob Dubbs smooth rifle, so I can try to include them, and what should absolutely NOT be on said rifle. I already put a hunters star on it, although I'm finding that there's not a lot of evidence for this adornment on Dubbs rifles, but hey,.... I like hunters stars.
Any thoughts or suggestions will be most welcome.