I am considering buying and restoring an old 1/2 stock, Hawken-like rifle. It is a large caliber, western rifle made in the 1840s that would likely have been used in the fur trade. The maker (who I will not mention here for a couple of reasons) is not especially famous, but still well known and made many types of firearms.
If I were to buy this rifle, I would want to restore it to hunting condition. The wood looks serviceable and probably needing just a light rubdown with linseed oil. The metal work looks to be generally in good shape. However, the bore is rotted out. Restoration to shooting and hunting condition but not significantly disturbing the exterior patina would require at least a liner.
Does anyone even make a .54 or .58 caliber liner? I can't find one on a quick search.
Alternatively, it could be rebored to a larger caliber. Perhaps a .62 though I would rather keep it a .58 if I could. I am not sure who I would have rebore, if I went that route.
but more to the point, were this an original Hawken, I am not sure I would still want to restore it in at all, as they have a certain amount of historical cache to their name. but it isn't a Hawken.
I guess the question is at what point does a rifle basically die and its history stops? I'm generally not someone who thinks all the history an old rifle can ever have is the history it has already got. I'd like to think I could add some more to it. But this rifle is somewhat on the fence here and I would be interested to hear about what others think.
I put this in the collecting forum, and I suppose I might get another answer in a different forum. If you are a collector (I would not consider myself a collector per se), do you shoot your rifles? Is it important that they are shootable?
And does anyone know where to get a .58 caliber liner?