Well hi. I have been thinking about commissioning an elk and black bear rifle made and am wondering if one could get a .54 caliber swamped barrel of 42” in length and make a rifle that wouldn’t weigh more than 8 lbs, preferable more like 7 lbs. Possible with a maple stock? Thinking a simple Pennsylvania school rifle would be neat.
Not gonna happen unless you have a really light (=weak) piece of soft maple. Definitely not 7# unless you go with a B50 Barrel..
I also sometimes wonder if these guys
look at the rifle & say "Yep, she's bout a 7-7.5# rifle".
A finished rifle on digital scales give actual weight. Balance of the rifle has allot to do with what guys think is light or heavy. I built a 10# Lancaster rifle for a guy to elk hunt with, 42" 58D swamped barrel. 7 dif guys picked it up & shouldered it & the weight guess was 8 1/2 to 9#. None believed it was 9# 15oz til I showed them on the digital scale.
I have built 5 rifles for elk hunters. 3 were D58 cal x 42"long & 1 was C54 cal x 42" long barrel & 1 was C54 cal x 38" long. All were Lancaster style rifles. the Lancasters with a .58 D weight x 42" & weighed right at 10#.. The .54 C x 42" was 9#, and the .54C x 38" was 8.5#
Any time I would build for someone doing allot of trekking, density & strength of the wood was very important. Wrist grain structure is imperative it be the best. For some a slight bump & broken wrist can cost them several thousand $ & end the hunt unsuccessful for them, & now watch others hunt because they are miles from nowhere & they can't trek back alone. NONE of the 5 rifles I built for elk hunters were concerned about the weight. They wanted Strong, Durable, Balance. For others it may be just a few miles down the road & can come back next week.