My first suggestion was about creating an easy-to-assemble kit that doesn't require a shop and all the tools required for non-CNC type kits. My first rifle build was just such a kit. I assembled it on my kitchen table in an apartment. It wasn't fun, and the result wasn't as good as I would have wanted. That experience, and feedback I've gotten from people who have built Kibler kits, tells me his kits fill a niche for these type of folks.
The more new people we can bring into muzzleloading the better off we'll all be. Otherwise it dies. Earlier this year I bought several Kibler locks. I was very impressed with their quality. When speaking with Katherine, she was telling me about all the new people that were ordering kits from them. These are people who have never fired a muzzleloader, are not reenactors, and in many cases have never fired a modern firearm. Let's make them feel welcome.
I was thinking of something that appeals to a wider audience. Can be assembled by new folks with less experience and with fewer tools. And would appeal to people who want to move into something traditional, but are not reenactors. Not everyone who buys a Sharps rifle dresses up like Matthew Quigley. Everything offered in kit form seems to be for folks east of the Mississippi. People on the west bank have more square miles of this country, but seem to always be forgotten.
Before you get your panties all twisted about that comment, think about this. I had a conversation with my niece last week. She lives in Connecticut. She was complaining about how small Rhode Island was. Really? Connecticut is so much bigger? Connecticut fits between Bozeman and Billings... the long way. God I LOVE the west. Just saying.
IF a kit was offered with the goal of satisfying those who reenact the west, and want to be authentic, I'd suggest a Lancaster trade rifle (the most common rendezvous rifle) or the J. J. Henry English or new English trade rifles (the 2nd most common rifles). These, of course, would be flint.
Once again, that doesn't add to the diversity of kit offerings. Most are already flint. Few are offered in percussion.
With that, I'll let this thread fade without any more comments from me. It had a lot of legs, more than I expected when I started it. And boy... do people really HATE Hawken rifles!