Well Im no expert But Ive been a Journeyman Machinist for 25 years and have my own shop at my home.
and have made a few things one being a Mule Ear lock.
The lock I shoot Now is a L&R Manton, Flint, and I just about have it wore out in two years shooting.
I took in all apart this weekend and all the tolerances are getting to loose. I shoot alot sometimes 150 rounds in a weekend, but two years!
I literally dip the lock in oil every time Im home and blow the excess off so I Know its not lack of lubrication. It lives "The Lock" in WD - 40
I made the gun myself and choose the lock over a small "siler" no particular reason the cost was about the same.
The parts that have high wear just arn't hard enough I.E the hole thru the lock plate and the same hole in the bridle not the sear hole. But the axle hole for the main tumbler/cock pin.
Dont even ask about the side to side play on the Frizzen.
I think the parts should be at or around 50-55 Rockwell on the C scale.
made out of a nice tool steel O1 comes to mind or A2.
It may cost more, but not too much more after the CNC is setup and proved out those little parts switched to a good steel instead of a casting would be worth it to me.
I have made up a number of locks using the L&R Small Manton-Durs Egg and Ashmore and I make precisely fit
mechanisms for them and I use 0-1 for the sear and fly and 1144 Stressproof for the tumbler.Also plate and bridle
and sear screw holes are reamed after drilling. Forged main and sear springs,frizzen spring seems to be OK but the
one on the Ashmore is not as pleasing to look at so I will adopt the Chambers late Ketland frizzen spring as I did on
one I sent to a customer a while back. Looks really good and better functioning. Beginning in the late 60's and early
70's the lock on any muzzle loader being built had to be the cheapest thing in the gun.I used to get requests almost
daily to make new mainsprings but turned them down.I usually said,"You get what you paid for" and one long time
dealer asked for quality mainsprings for the earlier Siler locks but that was another one I wasn't interested in.
Involvement with other shops and high end import car repair kept me busy and in the late 70's I sent a sample lock
to Guenter Stifter and Helmut Mohr in Germany and that kept me as busy as I wanted to be and I still worked with
the cars as often as possible.The man who got me interested in cars at age 16 was Raydon R.(Don)Thompson who had
when I first met him,two Model "J"Duesenberg cars in a garage and he let me help him with small jobs and in later years
was the owner of European Motors which was a shop for any and all cars from Europe and I helped him a lot more in
later years.These "Euroklunkers" as I call them are the reason we have owned 6 Lincolns in our 49 year marriage.
Bob Roller