I'm working on a Southern Mountain rifle mostly inspired by rifle #7 from Randal Pierce's Kentucky Rifles of the Great Smoky Mountains. It's identified as a Soddy Daisy rifle although the maker is unknown, it shares a lot of characteristics as one of the Soddy-Daisys in the virtual library:
https://americanlongrifles.org/forum/index.php?topic=2302.0 Part of the reason I chose this rifle is I really like the profile, the other part is the tang seems like something I can replicate and inlet with my novice set of skills. This is my first build and will be my first muzzleloader, I've enjoyed learning about these early American rifles and I'd have to say building them might be even more fun. Here is what I'm building with:
Barrel: Rice .32 cal 3/4" straight octagon, 1-48" twist
Lock: Kibler Ketland
Stock: Grade 2 maple blank from Pecatonica (I know walnut would have been correct for a Soddy-Daisy replica but I remember breaking out in a huge rash working with the stuff in high school wood shop)
Buttplate: TOTW Southern Mountain style buttplate; steel
Trigger guard: TOTW Carolina Rifle Style; steel
Trigger: double lever double set triggers from TOTW
Patch box: TOTW Tennessee banana
Side plate: this I will try to make myself from 1/8" steel plate to match rifle #7. To best describe it, it looks like a lollipop sticking up from a long flat bar with the lock bolt centered in the head of the lollipop
Toe plate: simple ~1/16" thick rectangle steel plate
Ramrod pipes: 5/16" steel pipes from TOTW
Sights: I still have not decided on these, but I will probably try to buy something to best match the Soddy-Daisy linked above
For the past two months I've mostly been acquiring tools and working on those to get ready to work on this rifle, the only progress I've made on the rifle itself so far is fitting the breech plug to the barrel, squaring up the blank, drawing and erasing layout lines about a dozen times, and this week finally getting started on inletting the barrel. Once I'm confident this stock won't be destined for someone's firewood pile I'll start a thread with the progress pictures I've taken so far