The sear spring.I know, I could have saved time by bending thin spring stock to make the sear spring. But I think milled springs look nicer.
Locating the screw hole for the sear on the lock plate.This hole is between the second and third bridle posts, as close to the third as possible. Mount the bridle on the plate. Make a mockup of the sear spring and super glue to plate, touching the third post.
In this picture, the bridle is removed.
Drill and tap for a #4-40 screw.Mill out the slot for the tab with a 1,5mm endmill.
The sear spring blanks are cut from 1075 sheet stock 4,7mm thick (0.187”) and are 6mm x55mm. The hole for the spring screw is 3,1mm and drilled through the 4,7mm sides, not the 6mm sides.
Next, I milled out the shoulder for the screw head.
Check the height of the blank. It should be as tall as possible, but still slip under the bridle. If to tall, take a little off the bottom.
Mount the blank on the plate and mark where the tab should be.
Mill out the tab oversized. It’s easier to mount the blank level in the mill before thinning the spring blade.
Take a piece of square stock and mill a 1,4mm deep shelf.
Solder the blank to the shelf. Check against the lock plate to insure it’s correctly orientated before milling the spring blade down to 1,5 mm.
Heat, remove blank, clean off solder. File a taper from the end of the blank to the beginning of the tab. The blank tapers down to 0.8mm. File out the screw hole eye.
Mount the blank on the lock plate with the tumbler. Mark of on the top side of the blank a spot that’s 2-3mm from edge of the lock plate. This is where the spring will be bent. Mount the tumbler and hammer. The tumbler hits the sear screw and stops the hammer before reaching the fired position.
File down the rear of the tumbler until the hammer can be rotated to the fired position. It’s now the sear screw that stops the hammers movement.
Heat and bend the spring blank, open the arms so the lower arm passes a 1/6 “below the sear axel hole in the plate. Harden and temper the spring. I temper for 10minutes at 370 Celsius in an oven. Do not cut to length before the sear is made (forgot to take a picture).
The searMake a sear pattern out of brass. Make sure there is enough room between the sear arm and the third bridle post for the spring to work.
The sear is made from 6mm thick mild steel. Glue the pattern on, paint with dykem, drill out, file clean. Make sure the sear slips under bridle. At this stage the sear arm is not bent.
Take off the bridle, mount the sear spring with an extra long screw. Cut the length of sear spring so it presses down on the front end of the sear arm. Remove all parts from lock plate.
Putting it all together again.Mount the frizzen spring on the plate. Do not put the tab in the slot.
Mount the sear and the tumbler. Keep the spring tab out of the slot.
Mount the bridle on the sear axel and the tumbler axel. Make sure the spring is between the third and fourth bridle post before pushing it all the way down. If the spring tab is in the slot, the spring will push the sear axel out of alignment and the bridle can’t be mounted on the plate.
Screw down the bridle, push the sear spring so the tab slips in the slot. This is why the sear spring blank must fit under the bridle.
Fitting the tumbler to the sear.Mount the hammer on the tumbler. Rotate the hammer to the cocked position. That’s when the tumbler arm hits the first bridle post. Scribe the position on the tumbler. Repeat for the half cock position.
Remove the tumbler and start the notches with a #4 blade in a jeweler’s saw. I find this gives me better precision than starting with a file. It’s also easier to keep the notches square.
The notches are cut to the depth of the sear nose and filed to fit the sear with a barrette file.
Bending the sear arm.The sear arm is 3.5mm thick and 6mm wide. I did a lot of experiments on pieces of steel. It was impossible to get a precise placement of the bend and a sharp 90-degree angle without cutting the arm and welding.
The easiest way to bend the arm is to cut a slot in the arm on the side that lays on the lock plate.
The dept of the slot must be 25% of the thickness(1,5mm) and placed 3mm inside of the edge of the lock plate (will explain later).
Put in a vice, start the bend by heating from the opposite side and tap the arm over. When the slot is opened a bit, heat from the slot side tap all the way over. This avoids tearing the metal.
If the slot is less than 25% of the metal, it will tear, or the arm will not give sharp bend.
If it’s deeper, you will get a larger corner that has to be weld up.
Look at the bend. The metal on the inside corner is compressed and thickened. The metal on the outside is stretched and thinned.
File away the thickened metal. Place in a vice and adjust the angle.
Remove scale from all areas where you what the weld to fuse. This is quickly done with a Dremel with a diamond burr.
If you assemble the lock with the sear in place, you will see the inside corner of the sear elbow is 3,0-3,5 mm inboard the edge of the lock plate and the rest hanging outside the lock plate. The part that’s hanging out will be milled away after welding the sear (sorry forgot to take pictures).
Welding the searWelding was done with with a Mig welder. Clamp the sear to a thick piece of brass. Add a large blob of molten metal.
Turn the sear around, clean off scale and weld up the other side.
Sometimes the first attempt does not fill the whole corner. Just clean off the scale , dig out any cold shunts and add a new blob.
File away excess weld.
Mill away the part of the sear arm hanging out the lock plate. Here are pictures of the finished sear.
Sear mounted in the lock.
Next part will be the fly.
Best regards
Rolf
Links to the other parts:
left-handed Alex Henry/Staton/Bob Roller lock. Part 1. Lock plate and Hammer
https://americanlongrifles.org/forum/index.php?topic=73225.0left-handed Alex Henry/Staton/Bob Roller lock.Part2. Four post bridle and screws
https://americanlongrifles.org/forum/index.php?topic=73497.0left-handed Alex Henry/Staton/Bob Roller lock. Part3 The tumbler.
https://americanlongrifles.org/forum/index.php?topic=73935.msg736278#msg736278