Well, Claven2, ulness you've got lots of money for buying flintlocks, I suppose that this is really too late ... but maybe you do have lots of excess cash, or will decide you want a left-hand flintlock after all ... or else there might be someone else out there looking for a good left-hand flint rifle.
Anyway, I was checking on Dixie Gun Worls' website, and see that they have a second-hand "lefty" .50 cal. Tennessee Mountain Rifle. That is a rifle they used to carry (but have apparently discontinued). My flinter is one of these (although a right-hand version) and it has an excellent lock and barrel - it shot right up with the best flinters, including custom-made rifles, that I came up against when i shot BP competitively. Very plain rifle with browned barrel and browned steel furniture (intentionally, since it was made to duplicate the very basic "poor boy" or working rifles of the southern back country.)
The other great thing about this design is that you can also get a percussion lock, with a drum and nipple arrangement which installs in the threaded touch-hole liner hole, to convert it to a percussion rifle in much the same fashion as original flintlocks were upgraded to flintlocks back in the early 1800's. (Just as easily converts back to flint whenever you want, of course. two rifles for not much more than the price of one.
The second-hand one Dixie has right now is offered at US$495 - described as in very good shape - and as a flintlock fits within the the US and Canadian definitions of "antique", so it should be exportable from the US and importable into Canada without a lot of hassle. (If you wanted to also get the percussion conversion set - which Dixie still carry, along with spare parts - then I presume that, as gun parts, that could also be acquired.
Here is the link to that particular rifle:
http://www.dixiegunworks.com/product_info.php?products_id=12734&osCsid=389d276944744b574ae378fdae1eeca8
Dixie also offer the kit form of this rifle - in flintlock, left-hand version only, so I assume that those are old stock ... mind you, the kit is US$575.00. so I'm not sure why one wouldn't just get the used rifle, if they still have it ...
http://www.dixiegunworks.com/product_info.php?products_id=11597
Here is a composite image I happen to have kicking around, showing my rifle together with a picture of both the flint lock and the percussion lock in place .... (The cap box is an after-market ass-on by me ...)
Anyway, I was checking on Dixie Gun Worls' website, and see that they have a second-hand "lefty" .50 cal. Tennessee Mountain Rifle. That is a rifle they used to carry (but have apparently discontinued). My flinter is one of these (although a right-hand version) and it has an excellent lock and barrel - it shot right up with the best flinters, including custom-made rifles, that I came up against when i shot BP competitively. Very plain rifle with browned barrel and browned steel furniture (intentionally, since it was made to duplicate the very basic "poor boy" or working rifles of the southern back country.)
The other great thing about this design is that you can also get a percussion lock, with a drum and nipple arrangement which installs in the threaded touch-hole liner hole, to convert it to a percussion rifle in much the same fashion as original flintlocks were upgraded to flintlocks back in the early 1800's. (Just as easily converts back to flint whenever you want, of course. two rifles for not much more than the price of one.
The second-hand one Dixie has right now is offered at US$495 - described as in very good shape - and as a flintlock fits within the the US and Canadian definitions of "antique", so it should be exportable from the US and importable into Canada without a lot of hassle. (If you wanted to also get the percussion conversion set - which Dixie still carry, along with spare parts - then I presume that, as gun parts, that could also be acquired.
Here is the link to that particular rifle:
http://www.dixiegunworks.com/product_info.php?products_id=12734&osCsid=389d276944744b574ae378fdae1eeca8
Dixie also offer the kit form of this rifle - in flintlock, left-hand version only, so I assume that those are old stock ... mind you, the kit is US$575.00. so I'm not sure why one wouldn't just get the used rifle, if they still have it ...
http://www.dixiegunworks.com/product_info.php?products_id=11597
Here is a composite image I happen to have kicking around, showing my rifle together with a picture of both the flint lock and the percussion lock in place .... (The cap box is an after-market ass-on by me ...)




















































