I am currently making a reproduction of the long lost Christian Oerter for the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia.Due to budget constraints the reproduction called for " off the shelf parts" rather than making a bench copy and that is what was agreed upon.After thinking about it for a while I decided to make some changes so the lock better represented the original.Jim and Barbie Chambers had graciously donated the lock for the project so rather than a stock Siler lock originally planned I had the send me one of their Gunmakers locks.My new plan was to not only duplicate the overall shape but also unbridle the frizzen.Once I completed that I notice that on the original lock the lock internal screws were blind.Seeing the screws really bugged me so I made them blind.Normally I would just take the plate to a friend and have him weld up the holes.This time I tried something different which was pretty easy and yielded pretty good results.I though I would share here ,it might help someone in the future.
Here is the original lock and one of Chambers Gunmakers locks for comparison.
My basic process was to slightly cone the outside of the screw hole.Slightly score the cone with a square graver.Then run an 8-32 screw a turn or 2 in the hole cut it off proud and peen it into the hole.I scored it with a graver so the screw could not ever back out.In this photo you can see the pan screw has been filled and filed flush.
In this photo you can see I unbridled the frizzen.Since the 8-32 frizzen screw comes from the back I need to fill the area where the screw head recess was.I made a plug and silver soldered it into place.Using a carbide chucking reamer I reamed the frizzen to accept a 10-32 screw.Then I drilled and tapped the hole in the plate for a 10-32 frizzen screw from the front and cut and filed the bridal off.
In this photo you can see I filled the sear spring screw and the sear screw using the same process as I did with the pan screw.A little tip when peening the screw on the front run another screw in from the back so you don't strip the threads while hammering on the plug.
I still have a little shaping and cleanup left to do but I think my modifications have made a closer style lock for the gun.
Hope this opens up some possibilities for others.
Mitch