Well, I finally finished my flintlock pistol. I built it from components, and had to do all the inletting, shaping, and most of the metal work. I actually started this gun a few years ago, ran into some trouble on inletting the lock, and then shelved it. then I moved, and got real distracted with my birds for a few years, hehe! I've built several kits before, but this was only my second attempt at such a "raw" start. My rifle turned out great, so I decided to make a matching-caliber pistol.
Anyway, I was off work due to a surgery, and figured I may as well finish it up, so hopefully I can use it for deer this fall/winter.
Kentucky style flintlock pistol, .54 cal.
10" Octagonal barrel (rifled), 15.75" overall, Maple stock, brass furniture, finished weight of 43.5oz.
I got out and test fired it today, and everything seems great. Off a bench, with no experimentation yet on patches, loads, projectiles, or fine-tuning the lock or trigger, it's shooting 3" groups at 25 yards. My two off-hand shots were right in there too! I should be able to improve on that with some load refinement. The front sight needs to be filed down, it's about twice the height it needs to be (on purpose, it's easier to fill down the front sight to bring the impact point up, than to file down the rear to bring the impact point down). It started out shooting a few inches left, too, but I fixed that already...
I'm not sure what my final load will amount to. This is the same barrel/plug combo I used for my rifle, and is rated to 120gr of powder. I won't be able to consume that much in the 10" barrel. I want to come up with a "target" or "normal" charge, and also work up a hunting charge. I normally shoot patched round balls, but do have 300 380gr conical's that shoot terrible out of my rifle (rate of twist is too slow) but may be fine for this pistol since the twist is much faster (1-22"). That may help with the overall energy level too, if I can hang on tight enough (I'm guessing two hands, hehe!)
I've got it pretty greased-up right now, trying to keep the browning (controlled rust) from building any more. That will eventually be reduced...
A couple pictures-


And a few tiny video clips (realtime, and slow-motion, since flintlocks rock!)-
http://s107.photobucket.com/albums/m309/Mtnman_03/?action=view¤t=Flintlockrealtime.flvhttp://s107.photobucket.com/albums/m309/Mtnman_03/?action=view¤t=Flinlock25.flv