Out of many many thousands ( won’t tell you exactly how many), we’ve never broken a mainspring. Given all of the potential issues with cast springs it’s silly to think a fully machined spring from bar would be inferior.
This is coming from a a metallurgist
Your locks haven't been around that long. I don't care how much engineering and metallurgy goes into making a product. Things can and will break, give it time.
I don't even know what your statement really means. Are you suggesting that if I just wait a bit then I'm going to have springs start to break? Is 5-6 years in service not sufficient to determine if they are suitable? I would also ask what you are basing your opinions on. Please explain. This statement you made seems pretty weak at best.
Again, at over 6 figures worth of locks produced over the last 5-6 years, and not one broken mainspring, I think that any reasonable person would conclude it's a very good process. There are things I worry about, but this is about last on the list.
Sometimes I wonder why I even bother to engage with silly statements like this.
Jim Kibler
Metallurgical Engineer