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I've been offered a .45 T/C Hawken (IIRC) with some pitting in the bore. The only reason I've been mulling it over is becuase I found Green Mountain has an Interchangeable Barrel System (IIRC) and what I'd really like are a .32 and .36 to play with.
Has anyone used the GM IBS before? Likes or dislikes?
Thanks!
If these walls could talk, I'd listen to the floor.
Green Mountain used to have a wonderful reputation. Barrel swap is simple with the hook breach and there should be few if any problems on the TC Hawken.
Sincerely,
Hobie
"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
Thanks Hobie! I figured it would be simple after looking at the GM site last night.
I searched over on the Traditional Muzzleloading forum but found very little on the system other than some barrels were shipped with metric nipples in standard thread barrels as I undertstand.
If these walls could talk, I'd listen to the floor.
I have a T/C hawken in 45cal. The bore would make a sewer pipe proud!! It will still put 45REAL 200gr in 3" at 44 yards. Standing up and leaning against a tree for a rest. Also my REAL's were cast outta wheelweights and lubed with Lee LLA. I even wrapped .44cal full wadcuters in thick cloth. They shot into 4-6inches. Think i used 65-70 grains of FFFg cuz the absolute longest shot would have been 70yards. Roundballs also shot well enough to clunk squirrels in the treetops.
30/30 Winchester: Not accurate enough fer varmints, barely adequate for small deer; BUT In a 10" to 14" barrelled pistol; is good for moose/elk to 200 yards; ground squirrels to 300 metres
250 Savage... its what the 223 wishes it could be...!
Cosmetics mainly, I believe.
The Hawken has a brass patchbox in the stock,a brass buttplate, a shiny brass trigger guard, and I believe brass thimbles for the ramrod and a brass nosecap for the forearm.
The Renegade has a blued steel trigger guard, blued thimbles, no patchbox at all, a blued steel butplate, and no nose cap on the forearm.
You might say that the Hawken is the Rendezvous Rifle and the Renegade is the working rifle.
I don't know about the Seneca so I can't give any info.
Doc Hudson, OOF, IOFA, CSA, F&AM, SCV, NRA LIFE MEMBER, IDJRS #002, IDCT, King of Typoists
I have a Green Mtn barrel in my .54 cal Hawkin. I went with the round ball barrel, I think it was a 1:70 twist. Love that barrel, you would think a round ball would not be very accurate, but you would be wrong. I have harvested 8 Mule deer bucks with it, never had to track one of them further than maybe 25 yards.
ScottS
"No arsenal, no weapon in the arsenals of the world, is so formidable as the will and moral courage of free men and women."
-- Ronald Reagan
The Seneca is a New England style small bore rifle. Produced in .36 and .45 cal one could at one time get an extra barrel in the "other" cal from the custom shop as well as a .32. Later, to cut costs, TC produced the Cherokee which eliminated the patchbox, double-set trigger, and some barrel length. It was produced in .32, .36 and .45 (IIRC). I own a Seneca and have both .36 (the original) and .45 barrels. It is a great gun. NIB and fine condition guns are selling for $700+ when they can be found. Parts guns have gone for $300 or so on gunbroker.com. Mine as a .36 is my #1 squirrel rifle.
This isn't my rifle (I just discovered I don't have a photo!)
Sincerely,
Hobie
"We are all travelers in the wilderness of this world, and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend." Robert Louis Stevenson
The one I was looking at is gone ( waited too long to commit ) but now I have an idea what to look for. I think I want a Hawken since I don't see the Seneca listed in the barrel options at GM (I want the .32, .36 and .45 ).
Thanks again!
If these walls could talk, I'd listen to the floor.
all the renegades have 1" barrels measured across the flats; hawkens come in two version 7/8" and 1" barrel slots. so be sure which you get before you order a spare barrel. the 7/8" came standard in 45 cal; you can even get a 7/8" .54 cal smooth bore interchangeable barrel. and in he 1" you can get up to .62 cal barrel rifled or smooth.
lots of choices. the .32 and.36 are available as 1" or 7/8".
good luck.
I have a Hawken in .54 cal., and I'm looking for something lighter. The good folks at the Traditional Muzzleloading Forum tell me the Seneca model is lighter to carry.
Here's my Hawken, which was butt ugly with a thick coat of some kind of varnish when I found it. It cleaned up nicely, and I'm glad I spent the $150 on it :