A while back I posted on the antique collectors forum about an antique store find - a cased British 14 bore percussion side by side.
I think this question might be better aimed at the builders here.
as for the old piece -
the good news - it has cleaned up very well, most of the case color remained under the very light oxidation. The pictures below show the comparison between cleaned locks and the 150 years of crud. Formsby's refinishing formula lifted the old blackened varnish on the stock without the need for sanding or damage to the checkering. The bores are great, having measured bore size, wall thinkness and running a scope down to visually inspect them I find they are true to size, no pitting of concern and plenty of wall. I am now in the process of rebrowning them with a solution from a British gun restorer, pitures of that will follow
now the one problem - at some point in history, the sear of the left lock was replaced with a misfit. if you look at the sear in the cleaned lock you will notice it is shorter, thinner and has a slight curve to it. the result is that although the lock functions off the gun, it won't work correctly installed. to get the hammer to the same resting position as the good lock, the left lock has to be at half cock. To match the right's half cock position the left goes to full cock, certainly not a safe carrying situation.
So I need to replace the sear. I will check around for a better fitting old part, but I think the two most feasable solutions are to have a new replacement made (cast?)or if all else fails, fill the holes and replace the enternals with the parts from a modern set, but that would mean reinletting into the old wood and losing a lot of history.
Any idea of a source for making a reversed copy? Sand cast maybe? or a good source of old parts?
thanks