Gary, I am guessing that many civilian arms in Germany were made in shops that were well-established and perhaps employed several workers, or that the iron furniture was made by specialists who had dies, trip hammers, etc. and purchased by gunstockers. It seems that for iron mounted military guns, dies etc were used to rough forge the mounts. But if that was true then we still have the question as to why iron mounts were not purchased here by gunstockers, if they were available. Cost and demand seem likely suspects.
In looking at a small sampling of civilian Germanic guns of the period at Hermann Historica, etc I see a lot of brass mounted guns as well as iron mounted. Even some highly decorated guns with extensive engraving on the barrels, relief-chiseled lockplates, etc have brass furniture sometimes. it may originally have been gilt or intended to be gilt, and of course, the relief-chiseled mounts are more easily cast of brass than forged and chased in iron.
But in the end- we don't know why iron mounts are so rare to non-existent on early rifles here. we don't even know why or how early settlers in some regions wanted rifles, when other frontier folks did not.
Has to be demand. Why make iron mounted rifles if people want brass? They made what buyers wanted.
The rifle vs smoothbore thing is personal preference.
But one has to remember that the people on the frontier were not "creating a persona". They lived (or died) by the decisions they made in many cases.
The rifle is more reliable for hunting and cheaper to shoot overall.
Yes, the smoothbore is faster to load. But its not fast enough for the distance it will reliably kill a man.
Bayonet? Useless. Makes the thing too long in the woods and takes too long to put on.
If you shoot at someone at 20-50-70 yards and he charges you will be hand to hand in seconds. An *archer*, as fast as they can shoot, misses his man at 20 yards and he is likely going to be killed trying for a second shot.
So don't miss. This is the key, *only hits count*.
It is well documented that under careful, peaceful conditions in testing a "common musket" was mostly useless past 50 yards. In *combat* this will be further reduced. Inaccurate firearm, frightened shooter, no sights? 12 pound trigger pull? If the musket will shoot into 12" at 50 yards and the shooter can (hopefully) shoot 12" at 50 under stress its likely going to be a miss depending on how the errors "stack" or cancel each other.
"My smooth bore shoots better than this" says the 21st century shooter. How is it loaded? Like a rifle or like a musket? Using a patched ball drastically increases the loading time. So for this discussion its an inaccurate rifle when the ball is patched since speed of loading then approaches the rifle.
In Bailey's book "British Military FL Rifles" we find quotes from an April 1756 letter by Edward Shippen to the Gov. of PA telling the gov that the indians are for the most part armed with rifles. He further states that for fighting "savages" he would prefer a rifle. Why?
Because with the rifle he writes he can put a ball within a foot or 6 inches of the mark at 150 yards.
With the "savages" method of making war the smoothbore musket is largely useless if they have rifles and they *did have rifles* from the 1740s on.
If YOUR life depends on it. The enemy is armed with significant numbers of rifles and *knows* how to use them. What are you going to want? How will you counter being shot/shot at at 150 + yards by a rifle armed enemy when you are armed with a musket? How will you kill the deer at the far side of the clearing/meadow with a smoothbore?
The superiority of the smoothbore in fighting in the woods is a dream. Again I would cite Morgan's men against Burgoyne's Canadian and Indian scouts as a classic example. The British scouts that did not flee back home would not go out of camp. Everyone one else was ordered, under pain of death IIRC, NOT to. Because Morgan's *Riflemen* were out there waiting.
All this makes one wonder how many rifles the French allied natives used when decimating Braddock's forces. The natives with the British, few as they were, were rifle armed.
Dan