Mark,
Do you or have you ever thought about using oversize length lock retaining Bolts/screws to pull the plate in for the final inletting?
Gus
Gus, I see where you're coming from. This would only work if your bolts go in straight.
I like to have the bolt heads low as I can get them on the sideplate panels, so this usually means the bolts enter the lock plate at an angle. The front bolt and rear bolt often aren't at the same angle, which would complicate things.
Acer, Thank You,
Yes, I can see what you mean after thinking about some original rifles and pistols I've been in where they had to do "adjustments" due to the fact the hole for the front lockplate bolt was not bored through the stock quite in the right place to clear between the bottom of the barrel and the top of the ramrod hole. Some of these "adjustments" included:
A. Though the bolt heads of both lockplate bolts were of a size as close as possible when making them by hand, the diameter of the shank of the front screw was reduced to better fit between the barrel and ramrod hole.
B. In some original flint and percussion guns, I've seen a "U" shape filed into the bottom of the barrel for room for the forward lockplate bolt or the "U" shape filed on bottom of the front lockplate bolt to clear the ramrod.
C. On a very small percentage of original guns I've seen, it was not possible to easily remove the front lockplate bolt after it was unscrewed from the lockplate. I think I've seen this on maybe two original flint pistols and one later flint rifle.
The first time this happened to me was on a flint pistol and I wound up dismounting the barrel and THEN the front lockplate bolt came out easily. On close examination, the body of that front bolt was "upset" or forged thinner in the center of the shank, though the shank diameter near the head and near the lockplate were larger. IOW, the middle of the shank was tapered down from both ends of the bolt to clear the barrel and ramrod hole. The front lockplate bolt could be unscrewed far enough to take the lock off to clean and lubricate it, but would not come out of the stock until the barrel was removed. It finally dawned on me this was how the original Gunsmith got around the "OOPS" of the romrod hole being drilled to close to the bottom of the barrel. That was not a low quality pistol, so I smiled and had a new appreciation that even some of the better original gunsmiths occasionally had an "OOPS" that they had to use their ingenuity to fix.
Gus