Billd,
A number of years ago I talked to the good folks at Chambers about Liners and speed. Trying to be short about, this is what the fella told me:
The standard size hole is meant to be drilled out. Get yourself a set of number drills and drill it out one # at a time until you start getting faster ignition. Usually one or two #'s above that will end up being just right. (This can be done in the field with a battery powered drill)
Also some like a little chamfer on the outside. I do, and chamfer all mine to some degree.
You must take care here and not chamfer so deep you run into the inner radiused chamfer (powder chamber). You chamfer depth depends on how deep the initial chamfer was when the liner was installed. A deep initial chamfer will leave a longer channel and require a deeper outside chamfer. A shallow initial chamfer leaves a shorter channel so it requires just a touch outside or none at all.
Another thing is the size of the touchhole itself. To my thinking a 1/4 dia. liner is too small for anything except small calibers and little barrels. The larger the diameter of the liner the more powder is in the powder chamber of the liner waiting to be kissed by the flame.
Work with these things and your rifle should fire instantaneous, when its right its hard to tell the difference between a flint and a caplock.
Now, tuning a lock is horse of another color............