Scota: I built the lock set that came with the Baker set that I bought from TRS, and upon examining my pictures on file, I find that I had to re-arc and re-heat treat my mainspring as well.
As supplied, filed and finished, I found that the lower arm of the mainspring had a disagreeable arc where the arm should have been straight, so I re-arc'd it and then re-heattreated it. I heated the spring red/orange in a soft flame of an oxy/act torch and some fire bricks, and quenched it in motor oil at room temperature. Then I re-polished it, and drew the temper on a 1/4" thick copper plate secured in my machinist's vise. I drilled a divot for the tit on the upper arm, and heated the plate from below with the oxy/act torch moving the flame continuously to bring the copper up to temp slowly. I had a drop of motor oil on the plate's centre to tell me when the temp was getting close...when it started to smoke, I knew I had to take the heat further away to approach temper slowly, and hold it there while the spring baked.
My effort worked out well, and the finished spring provided sparks like a cutting torch (almost). Although the rifle has not been used hard, it has been fired quite a bit, and the spring is still working fine. Again, here are some images...
The first is a before and after picture. I cannot say how many pounds are required to cock the hammer, but I can say that the lock is balanced, and creates good sparks with no bounce back, and superlative ignition.