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Traditions™ Mountain Rifle Kit - .50 Cal Percussion
$559.00

Traditions™ Mountain Rifle Kit - .50 Cal Percussion


The Traditions™ Mountain Rifle Kit maintains the classic styling and handling of time-honored sidelock rifles, while offering great performance and affordability. The Mountain Rifle Kit is a .50 caliber percussion rifle with a longer 32" octagonal white barrel. The rifle has an overall length of 48" and weighs 8.15 lbs.

Original price $559.00 - Original price $559.00
Original price
$559.00
$559.00 - $559.00
Current price $559.00
SKU KR59308

Description


The Traditions® Mountain Rifle Kit is a high-quality modern muzzleloader with an old-school flare. The Mountain Rifle maintains the classic styling and handling of time-honored Sidelock rifles, while offering great performance and affordability. The rifle kit in percussion boasts a hooked breech for easy barrel removal, and click-adjustable rear hunting sight.

One of the best ways to get a real hands-on muzzleloading experience is to build a rifle yourself. Easy to read instructions guide you through the building process to a finished product. There is no greater feeling of accomplishment than knowing you built a fully functional rifle for shooting or display. 

The .50 Caliber Mountain Rifle features a double-set trigger in an oversized glove-fitting, trigger-guard with finger rest. The rifle also comes complete with classic brass embellishments and inlaid solid brass patch box. The Traditions™ Mountain Rifle is a .50 caliber percussion rifle with a longer 32" white octagonal barrel. The rifle has an overall length of 49" and weighs 8.15 lbs.

Specifications

Caliber
.50 CALIBER
Barrel
32" OCTAGON BARREL
Barrel Finish
WHITE / UN-FINISHED
Rifle Stock
SELECT HARDWOOD STOCK
Twist Rate
1:48 RATE OF TWIST
Wooden Ramrod
YES
Overall Length
49" OVERALL LENGTH
Ignition
PERCUSSION
Trigger
DOUBLE SET TRIGGER
Sights
ADJUSTABLE REAR SIGHT / FRONT BLADE SIGHT
Rifle Weight
8.15 LBS
Assembly Instructions
YES
Traditions Warranty
YES

Features

Product Information

Customer Reviews

Based on 4 reviews
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R
Roger
Good Flintlock Rifle

I agree with Old Scout; with brass parts finished with 'Brass Black' after final fitting makes a classy appearing,
quality flintlock. I think the lock is top notch. Fitting is not difficult. The stock takes patience.

O
OldScout
Good Rifle for the money

Reid obviously did not do any research before purchasing. The barrel and furniture are finished in CeraKote brown on the complete rifle. The kit is clearly noted as having barrel and furniture unfinished (kit!!) and shown as brass and steel. If he wanted a finished rifle, that's what he should have purchased. The kit goes together well and I finished it in browned steel and Brass Black brass parts for a dark brownish black finish that goes well with the iron parts.

R
Reid
Don't Be Fooled By The Picture

Traditions uses this picture of the Mountain Rifle online, in their catalog, and even on the box the kit comes in, but it is not what you get in the kit. This picture with all the steel parts is what you get if you buy the finished rifle. In the kit, the thimbles & trigger guard are steel, but the butt plate & nose cap are brass. Only buy this kit if the mixture is acceptable. I would prefer all steel as in the picture, but you cannot get that in kit form. But you get the picture!

A
Alaskatru O. (Anchorage, AK)
Disappointed

I’ve had Traditions kits before but it’s been years, so I I’m not sure if the one I got is representative of the current level (or lack of) quality. The lock assembly looks fine but everything else looks like it came out of the seconds pile. The stock is so poorly machined that it should never have been put in the box, the tang area had too much wood milled out making a tight, attractive fit impossible. The router bits used were obviously dull and worn out, sloppy with lots of chipping and fuzzing. When assembled, the hammer and nipple are out of alignment, probably because the inletting is so sloppy, so now I have to try adjusting the hammer by heating and bending with an oxy-acetylene torch. This was to be a fun project with my son. Nothing fun about struggling with a pile of garbage for a hundred hours hoping it will at least function when it’s done. No way in the world would a newbie or a young person be able to turn this into a decent rifle.