I am an experienced woodworker and non-professional gunsmith who has never dabbled in flintlocks before. I would like to build a Jacob Dickert style rifle, as much for it's historical significance as it is the fact that he was "local" to me (I live in south/eastern PA just a few miles east of Lancaster). I have been doing a lot of research for the past year, and have purchased a dozen books for reference, as well as watched a few dozen long rifle builds on YouTube (I particularly liked the "Homemade History" guy from Germany who did a nice Dickert-esque rifle). So here's my plan ...
I'm going to order the Track of the Wolf kit parts separately in a matter of sorts. I will be ordering the Dickert pre-shaped, but not inlet, stock, the Colerain .50 cal 7/8" straight barrel w/breach plug, Chambers Deluxe lock w/white lightnin' touch hole, Double Lever Double Set Trigger, Isaac Haines trigger guard, Lancaster style buttplate, shallow crescent muzzle cap, the 3/8 brass tipped ramrod, screw and pin set, plans for Isaac Haines/Lancaster rifle, Slim Kentucky rear sight, patch box release kit, and the various pin and screw sets to go with the Dickert style. I plan on making my own brass furniture other than the wax cast parts mentioned above.
So with all that said, does anyone see any issues with that approach? Any other suggestions?
A few suggestions:
Took me a long time & a bunch of rifles bought & sold to figure out a buyer needs to actually SHOULDER a like rifle before ya build it. I would build them, but not enjoy shooting them. I absolutely Love a well built Hawken rifle. Looks, feel, etc. But for me it is like shouldering a 8' boat oar. (I said for me, some like it that way)
I have built several Dickerts. One had a 42" 7/8" barrel in .50 cal. Too nose heavy for me. Built one almost identical
with a 42" B50 swamped barrel. Lordy what difference that made. Nothing shoulders like a rifle with a swamped barrel. IMHO It felt like that rifle weighed 2# less than the other one.
I would wait on the muzzlecap until you get the stock & see how much web thickness you have between the barrel & the RR groove. A shallow Cresent muzzlecap may not be right. May need a std one. (Taller)
When I look at a ML, I start from one end & go all the way to the end. If you have a big gap between the RR & the Muzzle, I will stop looking right there. I want the RR gently touching the muzzlecap, not a 1/8" gap. This gap can be eliminated on the stock if it has it, but it is allot of work.
Since this is your first build, go ahead & buy the Dickert Sideplate, Dickert Triggerguard, & Dickert Patchbox (if using a patchbox). FYI, the entrypipe on the Dickert kit is not correct. If you want a correct one, you have to make it. Flehto on here is a expert on them & possibly can give some guidance on how to make a correct one.
As for the triggerguard, I would buy a Dicker TG. If you get a Lancaster or a Bivins, it is close to correct, but make sure you have a med or large triggerguard for the double set triggers. If you jam them in a small one there is no room left for your trigger finger unless you have very slender fingers. The DST will easily fits in the large Lancaster guard. In a med size one you may need to recontour the set trigger curvature a tad.
There is this rifle close to what you are speaking of on my web sight, without patchbox. I made it for a guy for a hunting rifle & he didn't want the patchbox. If you do the patchbox, it is imperative it latch very securely. If you hunt in brush & that style patchbox opens & hangs a vine, you will be replacing it & one pi$$ed off dude.
All in all, this makes a nice rifle, but I want the swamped barrel.
Oh....... before I forget, if this stock has a Lock Inlet ? Strip the lock & put the lockplate in 75% of the way FIRST, then move the barrel back to where you want the vent hole according to the Flashpan center. On a TOW precarve, you do the barrel in first you will have a problem, as the vent will be right into the breechplug threads.
Good Luck
Keith
PS: Not all rifle Furniture is the same.
If you are buying the stock from TOW, get the sideplate, buttplate, toeplate, RR pipes as well From TOW, unless you are experienced on what will work & what will not. Several times I've had people send me parts THEY bought for a rifle for me to build, lordy what a mess. Save yourself allot of aggravation, get it all one place if you can.