Tim,
I'll have to read up more on European lock production of that era. Thanks for the info! I appreciate any mis-conceptions I have being corrected!
Smylee,
Sometimes minute of deer is all the shooter can achieve. I was at a range next to a person shooting about 6" group at 100yds off a rest with a modern scoped rifle. I didn't see anything obvious. So I let him shoot mine. He shot the same with mine. It wasn't the rifle...
Anyway, if one can't shoot, one might as well look good while doing it!
All,
Out of a half dozen locks recently, I've two where some of the work is absolutely necessary. Being able to dump powder out of a closed pan is unsafe on a range or near a campfire and generally useless for hunting. And I don't mean 4F. Having a lock jam because the tumbler can move enough laterally for the fly to come out and jam the mechanism is also useless. For the rest of the cases, yes, they can make a spark. IMHO that's sort of a low standard. I'd say about half the locks are pretty good as-is. The others though...
I've handled some rifles where the locks are works of art. It is a pleasure to see such fine craftsmanship. The persons who have made the rifles and tuned the locks are proud of the work they have done. And they darned well should be! I've handled others where they are barely useful trash. You smile, nod, and move on. I think the whole range is out there. When issues can be seen at a glance, it makes one wonder what can't be seen.
Anyway I'm ok with fixing things myself, within my capabilities, and to a point. At the current prices I don't expect perfection. But I do expect the basics to be done right. What isn't, I expect to be easily fixable without replacing parts. This isn't always the case.
Had a gunsmith let a lock like either of those two I mentioned go out the door, they yes they might have been run out of town.
I tend to call it like I see it, and I am probably too much leaning towards being a perfectionist. When I see an example of what is essentially a fairly simple mechanism poorly fabricated with disregard for basic machining practices by long time professionals in the field, I am unimpressed. If current barrels or current triggers (I'm talking about the main US sources that we would use to make a rifle) were as poorly made as many current locks, I dare say most builders would be up in arms (pun intended).
Sorry, that's how I see it.
Actually I'm amazed we can get any of the parts for what we can get them for. I'd like to see makers quit sending out what should be rejects, and charge what needs to be charged to make that happen. A little bit of QC and bumping the standards a little bit would go a long ways. IMHO, of course!
It's costing me more in time and sometimes in parts to fix locks than it would cost if the manufacturers reliably sent them out so they wouldn't need to be fixed. But as I've said in another thread, I'm definitely not the fastest worker. So YMMV.
Gerald
PS - I'll drop out of this thread. I know my opinion is in the minority.