This experiment is not on my web site and data has been lost. (I may be able to find paper documentation.) Steve and I compared a small Siler percussion, small Siler flint, and a mule ear lock. Time is taken from the time the solenoid touches the sear until the sabot clears the barrel, so this introduces barrel time as a variable. We took great pains to be consistent with cleaning and powder charges to keep the comparison fair.
This shot shows the complete fixture with the mule ear lock installed.
Here is the shim that contacts the sear and starts time.
Here is the muzzle sensor. It triggers as the sabot clears the muzzle and exposes the sensor to gases.
Here is the complete set-up with the flintlock installed, the sensors hooked up, and ready to fire.
Another view to the flintlock ready to go.
Here Steve has triggered the solenoid. The pan has ignited, but the barrel has not. Catching the gun in between pan ignition and barrel ignition is accidental. The shield prevents the barrel sensor from triggering on the pan ignition.
Here the action is ended. Time to clean and reload.
This last photo shows the gun rotated to vertical for loading. One reason for the sabot is to hold the powder in place as the barrel is rotated back down again.
There are more photos at the link below, but this gives the basics.
http://s93.photobucket.com/user/lpletch/library/Pistol%20Lock%20TestsRegards,
Pletch