Currently I am working on an English sporting gun, and thought it would be a nice touch to add a sliding tumbler safety to the lock. I am using a Chambers late Ketland for the gun. The bridle and sear screws on the back of the lock are quite close together, which presented a design challenge in adding the sliding safety. A common safety design on English locks employs a sliding bar in a slot on the lockplate, with a stabilizing tab on the inside that engages a slot in the bridle. Here are a couple of photos of a P. Bond lock on a pistol I have by that maker:
I have a pair of old German locks that were once very nice that have a much simpler yet effective safety that does not use a bar in the lock plate or a tab in the bridle, so I used them for my design. The Brits will just have to forgive me! Notice the fly in the center of the tumbler in the second photo:
Other than a few critical measurements I just made the parts to fit each other, mostly by "eyeballing" and trial fitting. First is a photo of the tumbler as it came from the manufacturer:
The tumbler had to be modified to allow engagement of the sliding safety. I filed a flat spot on the tumbler, removing enough material so I would have a solid solder joint below the point of engagement. Then I cut a wedge of steel and filed it to fit the tumbler at two points and soldered the two together, then cleaned the assembly up with a file.
I marked and cut the slot for the safety engagement:
Next I began the process of manufacturing the safety and the activation knob assembly. Hopefully the photos are pretty much self explanatory. Everything is in the rough at this point:
Doing some file-fitting:
Sawing out the safety mechanism:
First dry fit:
I must apologize, I live in the boonies and my internet connection has been horrible since a storm blew through here a couple of days ago, so I will have to continue this thread later. What should normally take an hour to post has taken about four so far....
Thanks for looking,
Curtis