Hey Cory,
Good job with the fix!
I wanted to add a few notes about touch hole position in relation to mainspring. This is not about your current build, but may be of use to you in the next one...
As Dave B mentioned above, this problem can often be avoided by checking how the lock will sit against the barrel
before the barrel is inlet. Sizing up the situation by just holding the lock up against the bare flat of the barrel. that way allows you to determine the highest point the touch hole may sit without causing conflict. This is important. The proportions of some locks and barrels are such that they just won't work well together, and the problem can't be fixed by minor adjustments (like filing the corner off the mainspring.) This is especially the case with locks that have deep (thick) internal parts, or with locks that are too large for use with barrels of narrow dimension.
The touch hole
does not have to sit right on the centerline of r the barrel flat. It is acceptable to drop it down a bit. We all like to see the fore stock follow the center line of the flat. But if you look at old rifles, smiths often made adjustments in the vertical position of the lock, even if that adjustment didn’t agree completely with the upper edge of the fore stock (which was centered on the flat).
This kind of vertical adjustment wasn’t necessary an afterthought, or a fix to a mistake. Sometimes it was an intentional part of the design. See, for example, this photo of an antique brass barrel (thought to be from the “third quarter of 19th century”). Note that the integral (cast in place) lugs have never been drilled—the barrel has never been fitted to a stock. And yet the touch hole was predrilled, and drilled below the centerline. Interesting, from a design perspective…
So my point is to note that a touch hole drilled a bit lower than the centerline is not necessarily a weakness. Especially if the touch hole is lined with a coned insert, or coned from the inside, then the influence on ignition may be negligible. The more important issue re touch hole location is whether or not the touch hole is drilled properly in relation to the pan. It cannot be drilled to high or too low
in relation to the pan.