That looks AWSOME!
I did the same thing with a musket from Veteran arms. They said it was a fusil de chasse but after reading a lot french tulle muskets it is really a french common musket of 1695 or so.
Rifle looks awesome. You sound like me with those early morning experiments working on guns.
Hey glad to see you back buddy. Looks good to me but I dont know nothing about muzzle loading rifles.
One can see and feel the love poured in! She’s looks so much more ol’ timey and yet still ready for Redcoats! 😊
What an amazing effort. It looks great to carry.
Thank you and yes It really is! I forgot to mention on this video but shaving the wood down alone took this gun down to about 8 lb
Man that is a great job it turned out really well. I love getting to make something look more historically correct. Between the research and doing the work it's as close as I can get to a time machine and it is a lot like talking shop with the makers. I think you have inspired my next project.
Yes, that is what I should have mentioned and now you mention it. I think that's the reason why I like working on these old guns as much as I do. It's because you get to actually see what the gun smiths back in the day we're doing, how they put things together, how they made them work and how they made them feel.
Thank you for pointing that out
Wow! Ol' Char looks fantastic! 👍👍 I can definitely see it was a labor of love. Poor Bess will now want a spa day. The rivalry never ends. 😅
Lot’s of work, but definitely worth it. 👍
A Lovely job indeed! You can be proud of that beauty! Kind Thanks and Many Blessings! And keep some powder muzzled so we can see that personalized Lovely do her thing! DaveyJO in Pennsylvania
Beautiful work. I might need to try those techniques on my Military Heritage Lorenz. I do have the 1866 Military Heritage Charleville Marine, with lots of brass fittings. I refinished the stock with True Oil. She does not look period, not like your beautiful Char. I call her blonde, because the light wood finish along with the brass hardware makes her a blonde bomb shell. Great work, Ethan. . . .
Thank you Ethan - thats an excellent video. Your gun is beautiful .. I'd say that you have 'finessed' it. Best wishes to all at 11BangBang from NZ.
That came out great! I noticed the stock immediately and was wondering what you did different. Lovin it. 👍
Very nice video! I enjoyed hearing about your creative process, and the result is something you can justifiably be proud of.
Yes, wow
Looks awesome, I like the color, did you start to think it would have been easier to buy a new stock blank and start from scratch? Hahaha, worth the effort .
Yes, at certain points I started to think so and at certain points I had thought that I my have ruined it but I'm glad I stuck to the original
Paste wax or not, it is a good looking piece!
I know its not historically correct, but on a lot of refinishing wood tools or guns or even some furniture, that specific reddish brown that M1 Garands turn into after lonseed oiling is what i seem to lean towards. Just love the color. I've done old sewing machine cabinets, enfields, knife and D guard bowie handles, even a USMC corpmans knife handle. Also some leather touch up with it. I know ill get a hard time but , i like what i like.
Nothing wrong with that. As a matter of fact, a lot of people say that these old muskets were historically kind of a plain walnut brown, but after owning a few originals, I can tell you that the wood has a very distinct reddish tint to it. Not too far off from what you see here with the aqua Fortis
Looks like you did a lot of work to that one but she really looks good Ethan
Very nice video enjoy all your videos and your channel very much I am curious on this particular video on this particular gun 1766 did you line the touch hole with a new touch hole liner ,did you have to drill and tap the barrel to install the touch hole liner thank you I'll go back to watching the rest of the video now
Yes, this was my first flintlock I ever owned and I drilled the touch hole too low. So I drilled a larger hole tapped it and put a touch hole liner in it
Absolutely beautiful. It looks great! I want to follow your lead, Did you just use a wood file and sand paper to get that stock down? Also I'm curious on the weight of the piece after all that wood was shaved off.
So I actually used a farriers A lot of the time to hog off some of this wood and then I went down to files and then down to sandpaper and then to scrapers
What is the exact name of the book? I have a '66 Char coming this month. I want to work on it also. So anything helps
Were can a guy find away to convert that musket in to a cap lock
Question why not get a new rifle shop stock? Besides monies 😅
Because I could carve the old stock down to basically the right shape cookie without having to spend any money 😆
Raw linseed is better I've used it for decades and I use water base stains they soak into the wood better.
Yeah here lately I have switched to 100% pure tongue oil. It takes a little longer but it gives a much better finish
Sorry if i missed you saying in video, but did you replace the buttplate with a rifle shop part, or somehow hammer that sharp right angled indian original into a more proper and curved shape?
So I took a file and I filed the butt plate and the wood together more into the rounded shape. But I'm actually considering taking and getting a 1766 butt plate for the simple fact that not only is it rounded around the edges of the top, it also should be rounded right at the tip of the heel
@@Real11BangBang Thanks, good info, and looks a whole lot better than the original irregardless! Have a MH blunderbuss and matchlock that I don't mind the flat shape and angles so much being more primitive pieces, but wanting a 1795 Springfield which has that same 2x4 like rear end look that is much more out of place on what should be a much more elegant Charleville/Springfield and has kinda been my biggest hangup on not pulling the trigger yet, but your fine work gives inspiration!
It kind of sounds like you've replaced everything but the breech plug... in which case, is it really the same gun?
Here is a list of the parts that I replaced.
Front barrel, middle barrel band, mainspring, trigger spring, feather spring and hammer aka frison
everything else is still original to the gun.
The stock, barrel, butt plate, lock, (minus springs and hammer) rammer, cock, rear barrel band, trigger, trigger guard and all the other internals are still original.
I wanted to know about the "U States" brand. Did you make it?
I picked up a cheap wood burning kit with brass letter brands and numbers and I took a file and modified the letters a little bit until they looked correct
And ask for the IG that was just done with a wood burner and was made to be slightly crude like the original
Turned out great! Good old project creep got you, did it?😂
Yep it sure did, hence why it took a year to get this far because I've got about 15 other black powder projects in the works lol
I been temped to buy an Indian Made musket. I like the Tulle
De Chasse and the French 1766.