A few years ago I was building a model of a Baltimore Clipper when my son in law asked me why I was making deadeyes by hand. After all you could just buy them at a hobby store. I told him that HE could buy them but I could not. It was not about money, it was about building, just building. In the end, I donated the model a new restaurant and I went on to build other things. For many people, having a finished object is the ultimate goal, but for many others the goal is to make the object. It takes me about 80 - 90 hours to make a flint lock from scratch The finished locks spark well and I study lock design constantly. If I put roofs on houses I could buy 6 or 8 locks with that time, but I am driven to make them. The eighteenth century was the high point in human history for hand made products, that is one of the hidden reasons why Philadelphia high boy chests and Kentucky rifles are so intriguing. Once we stop following our passions and start counting hours and dollars, we leave the world of hand work and enter the world of “go to work” Most of us go to work plenty, and it’s great to sit down with a challenge which tests our skills on many levels, and then succeed with the project. Daves conversion lock is out standing for the detail of his work and stands as a testament that you don’t always have to take what is offered on the menu. Nothing wrong with cnc and nothing wrong with wax cast locks, but also nothing wrong with hand work.
Clint