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Let's Build a Traditions St. Louis Hawken Part 2 | The tools you'll need

In this series, Muzzle Blasts Field Agent Ethan cracks open a Traditions St. Louis Hawken Kit and builds it. These kits are a simple and affordable way to get started in muzzleloading, and kits are bigger than ever with COVID 19 keeping many at home. 

Check out this list of kits to find the perfect one for you

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In this video, we walk you through all the tools you’ll need to build this kit. This video was made after the kit was finished so we could accurately show you all the tools used. The basic list provided by Traditions is enough to get started, but we found there are some more tools that can really help the building process of one of these kits. 

You certainly don’t need all of these tools, just a few will get you through the basic assembly process, but we hope the extra tools laid out here will help make the process easier. 

There are a million ways to assemble a muzzleloader, and a million of them are right. This is by no means meant to be the ONLY way to build one of these kits, just one way. 


Have a suggestion? Email us at media@nmlra.org and we’ll take your comments into account as we continue the series.


Tools used for the kit

Safety Gear

  •     Rubber Gloves

  •     Eye Protection

Rotating Gun vise with swivel jaw

One Large rough flat file 

One course half-round file 

One 4 ½” long fine half round file 

One dovetail file for fitting the barrel lug and sights.  

A pair of pliers

Exacto or another thin-bladed knife

2 Rounded chisels with varying curves for inletting

2 flathead screwdrivers, one ⅛” , one 3/16 ” 

Sandpaper

  • 180 Grit

  • 240 Grit

  • 400 Grit 

“Scotch Brite” pad

Oil for threads 

Rubber mallet

Wood handled ball-peen hammer

Heat gun

Finishing Compounds

  •     Brass Black

  •     Brownell’s Oxpho-Blue

3-4 Cheap plastic containers 

Cotton swabs

Wood Stain (Your choice of color)

Paintbrush

Finish Oil

  •     Linseed, Danish, or Tung 

Shop Rags for clean up

Optional:
Antler for burnishing

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