"Mike Spencer" wrote in message
...
Pete Keillor writes:
Paper shims under the single cutter were used in the Foxfire book.
One
groove was done at a time until full depth, then index for the
next.
I still have all the Foxfire books somewhere.
There's an excellent video out there somewhere -- albeit possibly
not
on the net -- in which a rifled flintlock is tracked from wraapping
&
forge welding the barrel to rifling to making the lock and eventual
proof fireing of the completed barrel. Details of the rifling
process/tooling were pretty clear IIRC.
Sadly, I can remember neither the smith's name nor the "restoration
village" where he worked for many years. Some grovelling through
blacksmithing sites or googling for terms related to restoration or
re-enactment villages might turn it up. Not in New England, more
like
somewhere in Virginia?
--
Michael Spencer Nova Scotia, Canada
Here?
https://www.colonialwilliamsburg.com/locations/gunsmith