The topic about the sidenails brought this questio to mind.
When you all make a lock screw with a longer body and/or take some from the underside of the head of the screw, then get the screw to where it is tight without binding the parts - do you case harden the modified screw/s?
On some emergency fixes, I was not able to case harden the screws after adjustment. Had to get the shooter back to the line to compete. I usually case hardened the screws when I could, thinking that was especially good for the body of the sear screw to act like a hardened bearing. On the bridle and sidelock screws, I thought that would keep them from wearing into the lock plate and thus allowing them to be tightened sooner or later back to where they would bind. Hope this makes sense.
Never had any complaints after casehardening the modified screws, but I have wondered if hardening them would cause them to wear into the lock plate faster. Does anyone have experience with that?
Thank you,
Gus