This question could fit in several sections but I chose here because the principle applies to muzzle loading locks in general.
I recently bought a Rigby Snider sporting rifle (cartridge) which uses essentially a muzzle loading lock. The little link was broken which joins the tumbler to the mainspring and the mainspring, unrestrained extends about 1" or more below the bottom of the lock plate. It seems like a massive amount of preloading of the spring and presumably contributed to the broken stirrup link.
The question I suppose is twofold; first is just how far below the lock plate should the unrestrained mainspring extend without putting excessive strain on a stirrup link type linkage (think in terms of how much tension is needed for a percussion lock) and
how reasonable is it to modify (reduce) the preload on a original mainspring on a quality gun to improve a perceived design flaw?
thanks Doug
The mainspring is probably just like its supposed to be. Links fail sometimes especially when this old.
The locks were designed for a "heavy first lifting" it allowed a lighter loading of the sear on full cock since the geometry allowed the leverage to change as the lock was brought to full cock.
In percussion locks the heavy first lifting produced higher pressure on the nipple which kept the hammer on the nipple better and increased nipple life as this reduced gas leakage and erosion.
The internals on the late best quality flint guns are identical and I suspect that the lighter sear pressure and the higher pressure as the cock moved down may have helped maintain cock speed as the flint scraped the frizzen.
In cartridge guns having positive pressure on the firing pin helps prevent primers from forcing the pin back which can result in shearing bits of primer into the firing pin hole of the breech block. This can cause reliability/accuracy problems. Mushy mainsprings also cause accuracy problems with cartridge guns
Anyway this is why there is a preload. ALL locks have some preload.
Dan