Hi Richard and Smylee,
Thanks for looking. The lock on the English rifle is a Davis late Ketland lock. It has a nice roller frizzen and stirrup tumbler, and seems to work very well. I will cut proper stepped moldings around the flintcock and engrave it in the style of the 1820s. It will be color case hardened. The trigger guard was fun. It is a cast steel English fowler guard from TOW but I reshaped it a lot. I cut off about 15% of the front of the bow including the stud and then heated and bent it so it was smaller. Then I welded on a new stud and threaded it for the trigger plate. I made a nice pineapple finial copied from a John Manton gun for the front of the trigger plate. The standing breech was from TRS Clark rifle parts and my machinist friend made a beautiful chambered breech from 4140 steel. I filed the hook on it to fit the standing breech. The 54 cal barrel is a straight taper from 1.0625" at the breech to 0.9375" at the muzzle made by Burton. It has flat bottomed grooves with a 1 in 66 twist I think. The butt plate is original and possibly >150 years old. The pipes are cast steel but completely modified by me. The stock is a fabulous figured piece of English walnut from Ron Scott. I was able to get a nice pistol stock and rectangular block for other projects (tomahawk handles?) from it as well, which I saved for the owner. There will not be any carving but the wrist will be checkered. I am not sure yet if I will do flat topped or pyramid topped checkering. It seems both are appropriate for the time period. The nose cap is ebony and when I burnish it, it looks just like horn. I may use the alkanet root oil suggested by Ron Scott for finish. I am having trouble finding the right rear folding leaf sight. There are the usual Jaeger and English rifle sight offerings from TOW and everyone else but they are not available right now and I am not sure they are what I want anyway. Ideally, I would like some simple period correct express sights on which the leaves are held up by spring pressure or some sort of resistance to just flopping over. Any suggestions would be very much appreciated. The front sight will be a simple blade but I intend to try and inlet thin gold wire in the middle of the blade facing the shooter so the view will be a thin gold line sandwiched between dark browned steel. The gun will be fitted with swivels and a sling. All in all, it should be a nice gun, if I don't screw it up.
dave