I'm one of those looking forward to acquiring the upcoming Kibler Brown Bess. Had the opportunity earlier this year to tour the Kibler facility and was awestruck by both the machinery and the personnel. Am also a tad awestruck by some of the contributions to this tread. This forthcoming reproduction is to be but one thing: as true a reproduction (within the strict meaning of the word) of the Pattern of 1756 Long Land King's musket, something, if introduced into a stack of British arms on the Boston Common in 1775, would be undetected. To suggest it be altered to suit current tastes as if buyers are seeking a comfortable arm for an afternoon putting a few score rounds into a 200 yard target, I submit absolutely misses the point of the thing. The standard 'Bess was issued to British troops regardless of the recruit's shape or size; they adjusted to it, not it to them. I'm minded of queuing up to receive our M14 rifles in basic at Leonard Wood in January of 1967. We each received an identical rifle, be we 140 or 240 pound weight, 5 foot six or six foot five. It's a military thing, whether in 1775 or 250 years later. Order this as perhaps the very closest thing to a pristine Pattern 1756 King's musket as art and science can fabricate or, alas, look elsewhere. No object relating to our upcoming semiquincentenial (whew!) will come close to the Kibler 'Bess as something to hand down to coming generations.