I recently got 2 lock sets from them. It took approx. 9 months to get these parts which I felt was a bit long but I have waited longer for barrels that were being made here in the US. The quality of the parts received was top notch and my communications with them were adequate. I just hope that I do as good of a job assembling the casting as they did casting the parts. I will order from them again but I will do it well in advance of the timing for the project.
I have a year or better backlog of work and one rifle is at almost 2 years so patience is the key for us all.
Patience is fine but there is still NO explanation other than "Deliveries are SLOW."
WHY are they slow. Two years is preposterous. The Rifle Shoppe owner told me that they
shot their waxes and drove them a long distance to be used in a foundry that sometimes
broke fragile waxes. He also said that common carriers,USPS-UPS-FedEx were not able
to deliver intact waxes.
Can you post pictures of these British castings so we can see why they are worth such long
waiting times???
Bob Roller
Just what I thought. NO reply,no pictures.
Bob Roller
Well thank you Bob, it is always a pleasure to hear your very informative and constructive comments. What a pleasure,
Sorry I did not see this sooner or I would have posted the pictures you asked for. Now are these castings worth the wait? I don't know because I have never put together a lock from castings. You see this will be a learning process for me and I am sure with all the constructive information you post on this board, I will have the best locks that have ever been produced.
Now for reality, I honestly don't know if these are worth the wait. I think I will post my progress on the building of these locks. That way all the experts can tell me where I made my mistakes. Or maybe, just maybe, we will find out that these casting are worth the wait, Bob.
Judging from these pictures I would say they are no better than the current cast parts used by L&R
but a little better than the ones I used from moulds made 50 years ago for an identical lock.**
The last cast parts I used from England were for the Fenton flintlock as used on a pocket pistol
AND an original Fenton target rifle owned by Lynton McKenzie. It was a 16 bore and Lynton said
that little lock was as fast as any caplock and due to the tiny size it didn't in any way jolt the rifle
when it fired.This rare gun had double set triggers,an extremely rare item on an English rifle.
I made a copy of this lock using the plate,cock with top jaw and the frizzen.The internals were less than useless
and I threw them away.I think this one had a sliding safety behind the hammer which was a bit of a booger to deal with.
This was about 1980 when I did this and even then I got $250 for the S-E-A***work on this one.
Lynton McKenzie and Steve Alexander made a superb copy as well and I got it in to reharden the frizzen
a few years ago from the California owner. I think Lynton and Steve made a copy of the Fenton rifle using this
tiny lock.Good luck with these parts.It is not a hard lock to make after the first 30 or so.
Bob Roller
**About 125 Bailes/Manton locks for Helmut Mohr's Boutet flintlock pistols.
*** S-E-A "Sweat,Effort,Aggravation."