In the post about the Beck carving , Mike Brooks , made a comment to the effect that today , we may be too fanatical about perfection. I agree %100 . Years ago I was at Friendship , talking with a famous gunbuilder. He gave me many tips and tricks. I still talk to him every week on the phone, he isn't a forum member , but most everyone here knows him. In our first conversation he made a statement to me , that I still think about often , especially when viewing some posts from time to time. He asked me what type of work I did , I told him I had been doing , tool and die , mold makers type work for about 20 years. He said " there`s your problem" to which I said "what"? . He told me I was trying to approach 18th century gunbuilding with a 20th century machinist`s mentality instead of a gunstocker`s mentality. I asked what he meant , and he said" you are making it over complicated , by trying for "too much" perfection" He said they built by " look and feel" not by micrometer measurements. I realize , that people have different tastes and parts are sky high , so people are reluctant to actually build guns like the old ones. I see people build stunningly beautiful Bench copies of famous original rifles , but they "fix" all the blemishes , and end up with a rifle that resembles the original but looks more at home in the sporting goods section at Walmart. I am NOT writing this to tell people to do crumby work!!! It`s just that when you are struggling to do something on one of these pieces , it is very easy to over think things , you are probably struggling to get their results , because you aren't t, using their tools or methods. I love tools as much as the next guy, but I have seen people show elaborate set ups for tasks like barrel inletting , etc. When I`m thinking , I could hand inlet 5 barrels in the time it took you to build that jig. I realize old habits die hard , but , these days I seldomly ever use any of my machinist tools other than a 24 inch steel scale. I don`t write this to condemn anyone`s methods , just to make people rethink the approach. The only part of old time gunbuilding that is complicated , is the way we sometimes look at it. JMHO Nate