Traditional Muzzleloading on the Cheap

Member’s Closet => Powder Horns => Topic started by: hotfxr on August 03, 2013, 02:38:05 AM

Title: First Scratch Built Horn
Post by: hotfxr on August 03, 2013, 02:38:05 AM
My neighbor gave me a nice polished cow horn a few days ago. I had some hunks of walnut left over and decided to give building a horn a try. A little bandsaw cutting, a little creative rabbetting with a table saw, a little lathe work, and viola, a functioning powder horn.

(http://i1286.photobucket.com/albums/a603/hotfxr/July26th011_zps7995145f.jpg) (http://s1286.photobucket.com/user/hotfxr/media/July26th011_zps7995145f.jpg.html)

(http://i1286.photobucket.com/albums/a603/hotfxr/July26th008_zpsf5eea1bb.jpg) (http://s1286.photobucket.com/user/hotfxr/media/July26th008_zpsf5eea1bb.jpg.html)

The horn was a little more tightly curved than I would like which is making it solely a right side horn, but I can most likely work around that. The knob on the base is a finial from a broken cast hinge that was made in Ohio in the 1830's. Polished it up and blued it. Still trying to come up with a strap that I like. I would spend more time figuring bag, horn, etc. placement if my wife and daughter didn't laugh so much when I keep trying different configurations of all my shooting gear.  ROFL  ROFL  ROFL
Title: Re: First Scratch Built Horn
Post by: Hank12 on August 05, 2013, 12:44:03 AM
Looks good, HF, keep on changing things til you get what you like.  Hank