I have, what's remaining of my original 1979 T\C Hawken 50 cal, worked on the T\C lock. The only remaining components that were original are the stock, 80% of the furniture, and the lock. This rifle was ment to be used....and is still used... solely for the post Christmas Pennsylvania flintlock deer season. And it does that job quite well....if I do my part.
The trigger pull on this lock was 10+lbs as measured with my Lyman Digital trigger pull gauge.
So, me not being a fan of the set trigger, I disassembled the T\C lock, and using a Dremel, a soft material buffing wheel, and Flitz, went to work on every part of the lock that "touched" or "moved against" any other part of the lock. Doing this reduced the pound pull down to about 7.5lbs (IIRC).
Now, that is much higher than my other flintlock's that have L&R locks. Those other firearms also have a proper trigger pin placement to get the pull-LBS to a "reasonable" number. However, because I use this flintlock in (usually) very cold weather, I like the heavier pull. My fingers are usually cold and judging the trigger at the "critical time" helps with a trigger that has some pull weight to it.
Yes, I know the lock is not "PC"...but the entire firearm isn't. The rifle does what it's called upon to do, and the whitetail don't seem to care if the ball comes from a "Flint-in-stien" or a PC firearm.
I'd just suggest trying to polish it up to reduce trigger pull. Be aware to check the lock...post work....so that it still functions safely and won't "fire" with just a bump against something.
FWIW