Wow! What a bunch of information. My eyes are not what they once were, and neither are my nerves, that is, I weave around a little more than I used to. I have taken to carrying the Chambers 20 gauge for the reasons listed above, and because I like the feel and weight of it better than any ml I have ever owned. Its big Virginia lock seems to be as reliable as old faithful. Pull the trigger, and a bang or boom is shortly to follow.. The rifle I made my son has a Chamber's late Ketland lock. It is so much faster than the Virginia lock that the powder granulation may indeed make a real world difference in the Ketland. I am assuming the large lock is for dead-nuts reliability, and the small movement of the fowler when the lock parts all do their thing is acceptable, whereas the smaller rifle lock jerks the rifle arould much less, and ignites more quickly. Now this is simple observation and nothing scientific. I am in the shooter category now, and not particularly a rifleman, so that is ok. Thanks so much for all the information. I will likely forget most of it, but I think all that stuff hangs around somewhere in my head any.