Yes there are a lot of Belgium guns out there . But to tell you the truth , here in my area , I run into far more English " birmingham" then Belgium , when it comes to original SXS muzzleloaders . We forget that the English also had a very large trade in cheep grade barrels . Belgium did not have a corner on the market when it comes to this type of thing . in their credit though , even these seem to have been much more consistant in their make and quality of workmanship
Myself , I don’t concern myself with that all that much though . The real issues come later in the cartridge barrels . Even then the issues are not so much with the barrels but the hooks which face the barrels and hold them to the receivers .
When it comes to muzzleloaders , to tell you the truth both counties of origin breeched the barrels very much the same way concerning the threads . I have seen just as crappy of plug threads on English as Belgium .
The proof of where it was made though is in the markings they will tell the tail .
Some day I have to get the different proof markings scanned into my PC for posts like this .
As feltwad said , photos would be best but if you cant get them for a little bit , let us know and well get the different markings posted . Or you could just discribe what your seeing for markings .
He is also correct that the names on the locks mean little . Though most times the imitations will just have a last name . many times misspelled . But again , this was done a lot more in the late 19century to early 20th entry
Is there a Number engraved in the back tang of the TG ?
The 11 is the Bore . I have seen these m especially on English pieces were they don’t match .
I find this odd but even the Manton that I was aloud to inspect at the Cody museum had slightly mismatched bores . And no felt wad they were not stamped . I found this when I mic’ed them .
Was this from shooting or was it just aloud to be this way
Who can say but I have seen more then a few originals this way .
The breech plugs could have been done several ways . But most times the smaller turns inside the larger with the larger being made from one piece .
Dents in the barrels are not a real issue . The big issue is if the barrels are tight . They can look tight but not ring true . So be sure to ring them ..
They should make a nice ding sound. On that note one of the tightest sets of barrels I have ever came across is on a Belgium piece that I own . The actually ring so true that it hurts your ears . They register very true on my fiddle tuner .
also sight down the center rib . if you see an ary that slightly raised , this could mean a bulge under the rib or an area of rust thats starting to lift the rib . it can still be tight but still have some damage .
but again , the higher the tone of the ring , the tighter the barrel set is .
Next check the bores . Drop a light down them . Look for large areas of pitting .
Many times if the barrels are still thick at the muzzle , they can be reamed out and then re honed to clean them up .
The dents also come into play here so while your looking , see if you can see the dents in the bore . I actually am working on a piece right now where the barrels had been cleaned out and the dents do not enter into the bore . This tells me the bores were cleaned up once before with the dints not being removed prior to freshening the bores .
Not uncommon considering the people who worked on these pieces here in the west in the time frame of this SXS
Now if the bores are real bad inside , they can be sleeved also not a big issue IMO .
But myself I would try to clean them up first if need be , before I considered sleeving them .
Now to muzzle dings .
I had an interesting conversation some years back with Bill Brockway .
We were discussing this and he told me that at one time some smiths used this as a way to regulate patterns.
I found this odd , as I thought it would effect the loading . Bill assured me however that it did not . I have tried this and found that in fact it does work to shift a pattern considerably . Now we aren’t talking a smashed barrel here but just a ding at the edge of the muzzle .
I would however take it out and only replace it if its found to be needed .
So I guess we will wait for some photos , or descriptions of the markings on the barrel