I worked on this lock a lot. I must say, right out of the box, it was a good sparker. This is a Davis Colonial. A massive brute of a lock.
There were some things I wanted to change, and with one thing leading to another, I did a lot of tweaking all told.
Cosmetic:
Top jawscrew: I changed the profile from the full round ball to a more flattened profile.
Lock Tail: I filed a panel and groove across the tail to make it more like the original I was inspired by.
Cock retaining screw: I turned a new on at 5/8" dia head, again, more like original aforementioned.
Mechanical:
Cock jaws:The jaws would not hold a flint for very long. So I filed the plane of the top jaw so that the collar on the screw bore on the outermost edge of the hole. In other words, I filed the jaw down on the side where it bears against the cock upright. Now it holds flint like a champ.
Frizzen: I annealed it to polish it (much easier than polishing a hardened frizzen). While it was annealed, I used a torch to bend more curve in it, to get more of a shearing action.
Frizzen spring: the frizzen was bouncing back hard enough to bust my flints. So I opened up the spring with heat and rehardened and tempered it.
Fly: I noticed the fly was holding up the downstroke (when I had the mainspring out). I ground and polished it down until the sear floated over the halfcock notch without binding.
Casehardening: Once everything was re-shaped and adjusted the way I wanted it, I casehardened all the parts that needed it. Plate, screws, Cock and jaw, frizzen and bridle. On my forge with charcoal.
Triiger creep: a simple stoning of the sear notch and sear tip fixed this. Nice, crisp let-off. About 4 lb pull.
This lock is now incredibly fast, which is a testament to Davis' mighty mainspring. I am using a Rich Pierce White Fire flint, which mills off burning hunks of steel. There are actually metal cinders in the pan when I dry fire!
I write this because this is the first time I really understood what I had to do to get this lock working form 'OK' into 'Fabulous'. Every lock I buy has needed some tweaking to get it to my satisfaction, and I feel like I really 'got it' on this lock.
As I understand, most casehardened locks got polished bright from this Colonial time period, before color case was generally used as a decorative treatment, but I like the looks of this lock dark. Kind of ominous.
Thanks, Tom