I have been traveling and away from the shop for about a month now but had started a new rifle project just before I left. It is one of several pistol and rifle projects that have been hanging fire, some for quite a long time. In the Navy I learned all too well that "time, tide, and formation" wait for no man. The rosewood stocked, silver mounted pistols I started in 1973 are just one example of a project long over due for finishing. God willing, I will get them all completed before eight bells calls me out, but in no particular order it seems.
The parts for this new rifle were gathered mostly in 2017 while I was really busy with some aerospace test programs. They have been sitting patiently for me to begin the process….

The barrel is a .50 cal, swamped, square rifled Green Mountain that I purchased from Tip Curtis while visiting him in Tennessee. The stock wood is an excellent piece of hard maple from Tiger Hunt and the lock is one of Jim Kibler’s. The rest of the parts are various odds and ends I have had around for quite some time. Here are some of the parts prepared for further finish work, engraving, etc.


Dave Rase did the barrel inlet for me, also quite some time ago. I had shaped the barrel tang and got that much inletted before I put the project aside for a couple of years.

For me the two most tedious tasks on a build are installing the butt plate and installing the rear ram rod pipe. My Mother, when I was a child, always encouraged me to “do the worst things first” when confronted with a series of difficult tasks. That way, she said, everything else gets easier as you go. So, in keeping with my Mom’s sage advice, I started in on mounting the butt plate.



I did also finish with the rear pipe and then started in on draw filing the barrel. I wanted to get all of the metal work done on the barrel, including any engraving, so that I could be browning or bluing the barrel while I did other work. The draw filing went quickly and then I milled the slots for the sights and barrel lugs. The lugs were also soft soldered in place and finished off on the edges.





With the lugs and sights installed, I took a minute to crown the muzzle as well....


