I have a lock that I am putting on a pistol.
I have used this lock before and actually like it...with some reservations.
The internals being screwed up is now the norm for this lock it seems. A shame since its a very good design and creates very little jarring of even a pistol when fired.
I decided the best option was to fix it.
This shows the tumbler relation to the plate as received.
Tumbler does not pass though the plate straight. This makes it difficult to get the sear to properly engage the tumbler. Not to mention looking "unprofessional".
So I clamped a carbon brush from an electric motor to the face of the plate to keep metal from running through then welded it with my Hobard wire welder.
I then annealed the weld, installed the bridle and drilled a pilot hole through the plate using the bridal as a guide. Then drilled and reamed to .007" +- under the tumbler shaft. Put the tumbler in the lathe and turned it to fit. It cleaned up almost totally and now is almost round. Out of round tumbler shafts are the norm if left as cast.
The assembly now looks like this.
The lock maker needs to make up a fixture that will allow who ever drills the holes to drill them in the right place and 90 degrees to the plate surface so the tumbler is square with the lock plate.
"Workmanship" of this level is really pitiful. It takes no more time to drill the plate properly to do it wrong.
I wish someone would make a good English lock circa 1800, like a Manton, that would work on a pistol. Or at least castings that were actually available.
Dan