Pletch, thats some interesting and informative stuff you've done and I've enjoyed your tests very much. One thing that jumped out at me was when you said that some "perceived" slowfires were in fact not slow and some that seemed fast were in fact slower than others. When I have experienced slow fires from bounce back, I have never doubted that they were in fact slow, but now I'm doubting my own perceptions. If in fact a bounceback causes a slow fire, what exactly is the function that causes it? I mean, once the sparks are in the prime nothing is going to slow it down then is it? Can bounceback actually divert some of the sparks from hitting in the pan? I've always wondered about that.
I didn't mean to suggest perceived slow times were based on any lock querk. It was just that the eye, ear, and mind aren't up to the job I expected my computer to do. Invariably I would "guess" wrong. Whether the time was .0350 or .0550 it all sounded like a quick snap. (BTW your ear is better than youre eye at this.) The time had to be 45-50% slower before your senses could reliably guess right.
As far as rebound causing a slower ignition, I have no data. I have not used video and computer timing on the same trial, and that would be needed for such an opinion. My unsubstanciated gut reaction is that rebound does not cause a slower time. In all video, the sparks were in the pan long before the frizzen could rebound. Once the sparks are in the prime, I believe two things effect pan ignition speeds. One is how many quality spaeks are in the prime and the ignition speed of the prime, (including grain size, etc.).
I seriously doubt that a rebounding frizzen positioned over the pan will be able to direct more fire into the vent, but again I have no data to rule that in or out. We did have a Chambers round face lock that we videoed with NO frizzen spring. The frizzen rebounded gently and positioned itself nicely above the pan prior to the pan ignition. When Jim saw this he remarked (with tongue firmly planted in his cheek) that he worked hours to get the frizzen to behave that way.
Frizzens of the same lock style, from the same maker, generally behave the similarly. I think this is mainly common sense. Locks made from the same parts, on the same jigs, by the same hands are likely to behave the same. If I watched video of 5 Deluxe Large Silers, as an example, I would expect similar rebound in their frizzens. In fact, if 4 of the 5 behaved alike and the 5th one did not, you are likely to wonder what was different.
Here is where the high speed video can be useful. Imagine what we could learn by videoing a lock, doing a tuning step, and videoing again. If I were a wealthy person, I'd love to do this sort of thing. Because I'm not I have to rely on the generocity of the Olympus folks. I'm about to bug them again.
Regards,
Pletch
Regards,
Pletch