Dan,
Some interesting things about "Kings Ransom"...
The name came from Don refusing to sell it to a rich guy from Cincinnati at Friendship one year. The guy wanted to buy the rifle (Don had just finished it) but Don did not want to sell as it was his personal rifle. If you look at the sideplate, Don engraved an image of his first wife Suzy on it. Anyhow, the rich dude kept offering Don more and more money, even after Don said he would build him a copy, no go, the guy wanted "that" rifle. Apparently he became insistent to the point of being rude and, Don being Don, told him to *%#* off. Jim Coon witnessed the event and later, over whiskies in Jim's tipi, he remarked "I have now seen King's ransom." The name stuck.
Another one...
Don told me at the Guild Fair in Bozeman that he was using King's Ransom at Friendship in the offhand championships and doing quite well. He set the gun in a rack after loading it to wait his turn to shoot. Someone put a handful of sand down the barrel and when Don fired the rifle, it really messed the barrel the up. Don got mad, jumped in his VW, drove back home, freshed the barrel to clean it up and went back to Friendship and finished the match...posting the high score. He really laughed, telling me that story. I've bore-scoped and measured King's Ransom and it has been freshed, as well as having a slight choke...it still shoots extremely well. Don also said that he thought he had put over 10,000 rounds through King's Ransom.
Don told me that he had hocked King's Ransom three different times when he got broke but always got it back. You've probably noticed the four small inset silver flowers on the top flat of the barrel...they hide the screw holes for Unertl scope blocks. Don would use a Unertl Small Game 6X scope when he did load development. Don't know where the scope went; Don used the tang peep sight he made for the rifle when he shot benchrest matches with it.
To me, King's Ransom really represents Don's life as a gunsmith. Not his fanciest rifle, but it sure has a lot of his life and times wrapped up in it.
Steve