Hello Folks,
There is lots going on in the shop and we're teeming with business! Dave and I have a work list a mile long and we're cramming a lot into this summer. We're facing an awful wave of high heat and humidity this coming week that'll make us both grumpy and miserable. Thankfully we have AC in the shop so work shouldn't be too bad.
Now to the updates on the work on this fusil!
Back in March I got the barrel for this gun. It was 39" long, 1 1/4" at the breech and 13/16" at the muzzle to fit a bayonet. Quite simply, it was bloody heavy. The wedding band transition was too far back towards the breech so I took one look at it, picked it up, almost dropped it, flopped it in a vise, picked up a mill lathe file and got to work.

Using the lathe file I extended the octagon section about 4", completely wiping out the wedding band.


I started with a barrel that had a straight taper but needed to modify it to a barrel that had the majority of the taper in the octagonal portion and just a very slight taper from the transition to the muzzle. So, after extending the octagonal section as far as it needed to go I got to work pairing down the round portion of the barrel. Here Dave helped me by doing some top secret "twiddling" on the barrel which really sped things up. Once both areas were completed to the dimensions I wanted them to be and the taper changed, I started working on the transition from octagonal to round. I really did not feel like cutting in a wedding band so I did a simple transition of octagon to hexadecagon to round. At this point I had taken over a pound of metal off of this barrel.

I completed the transition and then sanded it a bit. The sanding ended up changing the transition and rounding it over a bit more than I would have liked but that will be fixed at a later date. I'll simply sharpen up the edges with a file and go over it with finer sandpaper. For now, I left it as is and inlet it.

After inletting the barrel I Acra glassed the barrel channel as that can make it up to 10 times stronger. I then shaped the hook tang and breech using a little half round file.



Once that was completely fit, I filed the face of the standing breech to fit the breech of the barrel, cleaned it up, soldered it and inlet it.


I'll leave this at this point for now so people are not mindlessly reading miles of my ramblings and photos and I will continue this update later.
I hope you all enjoyed. Stay safe and stay cool folks!
--Maria