Don;
When I first got into muzzleloading, there were several places you could pick up cheap flintlocks, that if you messed them up, you weren't out much. These weren't even remotely close to the quality of the average lock today, but if you played with them a lot, and held your mouth just right, they would work alright for a short time. I probably ruined a pickup full of them. Dixie's old F1 flintlock was cheap, and if you put a lot of shop time into it could be made usable. CVA was making their copy of the Maslin lock that could be tuned to work pretty well too. Many CVA dealers had a parts board that allowed customers to buy replacement parts right at their local gun store. The market has changed, and these cheap "practice" locks, aren't around much anymore. Now the best way to go if you are a kinetic learner like myself, is to buy a lock kit from manufacture that has readily available parts, to replace the learning curve ones that don't work anymore. I use a lot of Chambers locks, because the parts are readily available, and the quality is good. Chamber's customer service is pretty good also.
Hungry Horse