Hi folks,
I was speaking with Lowell Haarer at the New Market show this weekend. We were discussing locks, and the topic of breaking/chipping flints came up. It occurred to me that maybe some of y'all haven't heard of the trick I learned, so I will share it here.
In talking with folks and researching why some locks are hard on flints, I repeatedly heard that "balancing" the power of the mainspring versus the frizzen spring is the cure. I don't doubt this, but I am certainly not a builder like many on here......nor am I the great Jim Chambers!
In one book I read that one reason that flints get chipped/hammered/broken is that the frizzen actually bounces bad after opening, hitting the resting flint in the cock, and effectively knaps the edge of the flint. It sure looked like the description of what my Late Ketland was doing to the flints. I was losing flints at a fast rate.
The solution in this book (I don't recall which right now), was to simply extend a piece of flattened lead ball out to the end of the flint on the top side. This takes the blow from the knapping frizzen thereby stopping the issue. I use leather in the jaws, so I experimented with longer leather on top.
VOILA! Problem solved. The current flint you see is an old one, but keeps on sparking like mad. It feels a little dull, but the gun goes off "right now".
Thank you Lowell for asking me to share this.
BTW, Lowell makes some beautiful rifles, and I got to handle a few at the show. Well done, well balanced, and finely detailed.
Best wishes and God Bless, Marc