Hey everyone! I spent all afternoon filing out this double-rivet patchbox latch, and when I riveted it to the lid I had a very hard time with one of them - the angle was such it was very hard to hold and get solid hits. Anyway, I
thought it was riveted well , but when I filed it out, it wasn't. Think I left too much and it mushroomed over and didn't fill.
So I get to carefully remove it and make another one. The filing was very fiddly and took a long time - I cut the two posts on the top square, then filed octagon, then round. There's not much room in between so it's real hard to get files in there, then cleaning up the base so it sits flush was tedious.
I guessed that was how the 18th century guy would have done it. I considered using the drill press and drilling two holes and soldering in two bits of 1/16" rod, but that "feels" like modern thinking.
Is it necessary to even file the posts round? If left octagon or even square, wouldn't the rivet still fill the countersink? How would the 18th century smith have approached this?