That Manton was and is THE final conclusion to externally generated ignition systems in guns.
These attempts left us with some wonderful relics to try to emulate.
So far I haven't succeeded.
That’s amazing ... given the talent of you, Smart Dog and others here, that ‘we’ haven’t been able to replicate the performance of a Manton lock. Do you have any more thoughts on why this could be? Not debating, and most certainly not challenging anyone ... just questioning and trying to learn.
I wonder if it may be based in ‘craftsmanship’, but in meaning a LIFETIME OF IT, as in doing nothing else for a ‘day job’ but that task. I recall my Father, who was an old school craftsman in the locksmithing (keys & locks, not gun locks) trade for 60+ years and he could decode a wafer tumbler lock in seconds by eye, where ‘younger’ (in both age and experience) smiths would need decoding tools and still take many minutes, or even many key blanks, to do the same.
Thanks in advance for your thoughts!
You got me to thinking back,back to the 1950's when IRON* frizzens were being made by
a man in Ohio,Ken Roethlesberger I think.After dosing them good with Kasenit,THESE frizzens would produce a fierce amount of sparks bordering on flames
at times.What we have now are cast in steel,mostly 1095. I had 100 frizzens cast for a German project that I worked on from 52-100 or ball bearing steel.
After case hardening them and using a warm oil quench the were tempered to a light straw color and with a sharp flint they would ALMOST duplicate the
performance of Tom Dawson's Manton but not quite.This was in the late 1970's and early 80's and those locks are still in use in European competitions in
a replica of a Boutet pistol made by Helmut Mohr in Mayen/Hausen Germany.Maybe the trick is in the frizzen material as well as the near perfect match in
the curvature of the frizzen face and the fixed pivot of the cock AND the quality of the flint.A powerful,preloaded mainspring and a correct preload on the
frizzen spring is another big consideration PLUS the fact that these locks were the state of the art in that time frame and still are today.Another thing that
Tom Dawson told me was,"We are today trying to relearn the skills that were common over 100 years ago".This was the late 1960's when he told me that and he was right.
Bob Roller
*Some of the first good quality cast parts were offered by Ted Cole who lived in Wilkinsburg,Pa.
He had cocks,top jaws and frizzens cast from steel but I have no idea what it was as far as alloy or numbers are concerned.
He made the lock plates from sheet steel either 1/8" or5/32" thick and W.G.Sutter made the internal parts from 1095 for
springs and tumblers were made from torsion bars taken from wrecked Chrysler and Packard cars.
To my knowledge the first ALL investment cast locks were from Chet Shoults in LaPeer,Michigan and these parts are still
available from Jerry Devaudreuil in Wooster Ohio as far as I know.As I recall,all these parts were all 8620 and Shoults fitted them
and cased hardened them as well with Kasenit.