Remember Mark Baker? He used to write for Muzzleloader magazine. Maybe he still does. I remember his rifle was a smoothbore. Built just like a longrifle, with rifle sights, same stock, trigger guard, etc., but it had a smooth bore. .50 caliber I think.
Does anyone know who might build such an item these days? I've had so many custom longrifles, but they were all so dern hard to clean. A fullstock rifled barrel just will not clean up without a lot of time invested each time you shoot it. I've tried the flushing tubes, all the different cleaning agents, but I always spent more than an hour getting the bore to produce a clean patch.
Some say you don't want it perfectly clean; that it should be "seasoned." But I want mine totally 100% spanking clean when I put it away.
So, I've been thinking about a smooth rifle, or even a NorthWest trade musket with just the front sight. They can be had in 28 guage (.54 caliber), but the advertised accuracy is 3" at 50 yards. Seeing as how I don't really have a desire to use shot, and seeing as how I like the lines of a longrifle, what might I do? I keep going back to a smooth rifle, but the only one I can find is Jim Chambers kit, which ain't really a kit at all, but a box of parts. I have trouble taking my gas cap off the truck, so I know I can't put a gun together.
Many years ago, more than 25, I bought a Chambers "kit." It was the early Lancaster style with a 44" swamped barrel, with some cast off in the stock. Someone put it together for me for $500. Lordy did that gun fit me. I wore it out, but instead of having it refurbished, I sold it. I was so sick of cleaning that long barrel.
Any thoughts?