David,
I ALWAYS listen when Taylor offers advice or opinion, ALWAYS!
Another thing you can try is to use a file and adjust the apex of the cam on the foot of the frizzen a little further forward. Many locks are made with frizzen spring tension that is too great, in my opinion, and adjusting the cam forward a little both lessens the force applied to the frizzen and also reduces the tendency to bounce back.
A second adjustment is to use your file to reduce the stop on the frizzen that limits how far the frizzen can open. Many original guns, especially the French guns I have, the frizzen opens until the pan-cover part of the frizzen is completely vertical or actually leaning a little forward of vertical. This puts more of the frizzen weight forward and reduces the tendency to pop back. The popping back is caused by the frizzen stop forcing the feather spring down from inertia and then the feather spring forcing the frizzen back. By relieving the stop and allowing the frizzen to move further forward there is more frizzen mass working against the feather spring, reducing the snap-back phenomenon.
I hope this helps. But remember, I am a hobby builder, not a professional.
Best Regards,
JMC
John Cholin