Thanks for the great ideas. They give me some options. Slotting the plate may be the best option although I hate cutting slots in flat stock. Thanks Danny
If you don't like cutting slots into in flat stock,,the rigger plate in this case,,you can file the lug on the guard back till it's no more than a round post. Use the length of the existing lug to figure a spot where the 'post' will be most advantagous in your final fit-up.
As you then drill a simple round hole thru the trigger plate to install the guard. Rivit it over on the inside, counter sink it or not.
The post doesn't have to be a perfect round post either, you can cheat a little and leave it flat sided to give it a bit more diameter size to it. It'll all rivit itself into place when that's done.
The idea is not to have to cut slots and use a single drilled hole only.
Since the much smaller round brass post hasn't near the strength as the lug would have had and pulling the guard free isn't what you want to see done in the future,,,When assembling, tin the contact surfaces of the trigger plate and the guard before you rivit.
Sweat solder the joint as the final riviting taps are applied. Make sure of your allaignment of course.
The tail of the guard needs to be right and not pointing S by SW out of the toe line of the stock.
Place it back in the stock after riviting but not soldered to make sure of allaignment. Then carefully remove and solder.
The tang screw should be already fitted, drilled and tapped into the trigger plate.
The trigger plate and guard are one piece now but they would also be one piece if just rivited together w/ a square lug too,,and you just didn't have to cut a square slot.
'Silver' bearing soft solder,,,lead/tin soft solt,,,that's all you really need for a job like this.
The Silver bearing soft solder stuff has a better 'takes more to pull it apart' rating than lead/tin but it will always stay bright white so any solder lines will show.
Probably not a concern here if the guard overlaps the trigger plate and onto the wood.
I still call hard solder ,,silver solder. It's confusing when I and others still do since the silver soft solders came on the scene. Not our fault though!
..and brazing,,that was always soldering with brass.
Lots of confusing use of terms