This one is an Investarms Gemmer-Hawken flinter in .50 bore, 32" bbl, 1:60 rifling for patched balls. Before even starting the kit I sold off the lock and DST, replaced by L&R goodies - RPL05 lock and T5 DST. I don't spend much time or effort in these guns, they is what they is and none have much to do with what they're s'posed to represent. Not particularly interested in the minutiae of period/era correctness, so to each their own, you either like 'em or hate 'em or sometimes settle on that's all you can afford. I do demand good functionality and acceptable off-hand accuracy.
Anyhoo, there was more to this kit than using a screwdriver since both the new lock and DST required inlet work, and the tooling included a Dremel, chisels, rasps, scrapers, abrasives, etc. I also pulled the breech plug to clean it and bbl out of proofing residue, check and file the touch hole liner to set flush with the bore of the breech flue, and screw it all back together with Nikal anti-seize grease. I built new ramrods, epoxy and pinning the brass ferrules, and ditched the cheesy supplied one, with one dedicated to a 6.5mm brush for cleaning out the breech flue.
The stain was by LMF in walnut and nut brown, the finish Tru-Oil and MinWax. After staining and before the clear coats I wicked in water thin CYA (Hot Stuff) into the entire lock and DST mortises, the wood surrounding the breech plug, and the bbl channel - this both seals and hardens the wood from you-know-what. When it cures in a few days or so the hideous stock shine will get buffed out with 0000 wool and it'll get rubbed out to a sorta matte finish, as I prefer. The steel furniture will be left as it, as will be the bbl, though I might vinegar it to kill off the shine - I'm not a fan of browning or bluing bbls. That's about it, another one bites the dust.
Good lock time, 5 to 6 ounce fire trigger pull weight ...