Dennis,
Thank you for your posts they help us new guys.
I would also like to ask if you could post some pictures of the area in question.
Jim,
Not sure if this photo will help but here it is.
Before I start to inlet an lock I always mark where the touch hole will be. I like the touch hole to be just a few thousandths in front of the face of the breech plug. I start by sticking a ram rod down the bore until it hits the face of the breech plug. I then mark it with a sharp pencil or knife point. Then I transfer this mark onto the outside of the barrel on the flat where the touch hole will be. This tells me where the breech plug face is. I then SHOULD make another mark toward the muzzle that allows the vent liner threads to clear the face of the breech plug. (This is where I had the brain cramp. I failed to allow for the vent liner threads) Then you allow for half the diameter of the touch hole, I usually add .035" to be sure. This should mark the spot where your touch hole should be.
I then lay my lock plate on the stock, centering the pan where the touch hole will go, position it where I want it then using a thin flat ruler I line the center of the pan where it will match up with where I want my touch hole. Make whatever vertical adjustments I need to get the lock plate where I want it (make sure the touch hole will be fairly close to the center of the bore, not too low where the vent liner will be too close to the bottom of the bore). Once I get all this worked out I take a sharp punch and prick (not too deep, in case something happens you can move the touch hole) the barrel so you can see where the touch hole is to go. I then inlet the lock and after it is finished I will install the vent liner and if I did everything right the touch hole threads will be a few thousandths clear of the
breech face. The touch hole in the photo looks a little off but its dead center perfect, just too close to put a vent liner in without part of it being in the threads of the breech plug.
I don't worry about where the fence of the lock ends up in relation to the breech.
In my case the fence ended up being behind the breech by about .110.
Hope this helps and I didn't confuse you. Others may do it differently but this USUALLY works for me!
Dennis