Hi,
Thank you all for looking.
Steeltrap,
I have no issues with annealing hardened lock parts, reshaping them, and then hardening and tempering them again. To weaken the mainspring I first ground the bevel on the sides wider. That often is enough but not on this heavy spring. It was really strong. Consequently, I heated the spring red hot, closed the main bend just a little and gave the lower leaf a slight downward curve. I then thinned the lower leaf a little. To strengthen the frizzen spring, I heated it red hot and bent the upper leaf upward slightly. The both springs were polished, heated to bright orange red with a MAPP gas torch and quenched in 2" of canola oil floated on top of a #10 can filled with room temperature water. Because I do not know the steel alloys used in the parts, I take an extra step before hardening by heating the springs bright red and then letting them cool almost to the touch, then heating them back up to bright orange red and quenching. The cycle of heating and cooling helps to "normalize" the steel, making it more ductile and strengthening it. I generally want the force required to open the frizzen to be about 30% of the peak force required to pull the cock back from rest to full cock. That is my starting point and then I go from there depending on the lock. If the cock has a short throw, that formula of relative forces usually works well. I never let the force of the frizzen spring drop below that 30%. If it has a long throw, like a musket lock, I'll up that force. If the lock has a roller in the frizzen spring or frizzen toe, I have a completely different strategy altogether, which I won't go into here. I don't know where so many reenactors get the notion they have to have really anemic frizzen springs. Somebody has misinformed them. They often come to me because the frizzen won't open all the way and they think the frizzen spring must be too strong. I close the frizzen and there is almost no tension at all. What is happening, their frizzen spring is so weak the frizzen rebounds and closes partially. They never believe me until I put a piece of tape on their frizzen spring where the toe of the frizzen will hit when fully opened. They fire the lock and "lo and behold", the tape has a dimple in it. Then I strengthen their frizzen springs and their lock works great, and they are surprised. If you want to see this weak spring nonsense in action, just go find the documentary on the American Revolution hosted by Bill Curtis:
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In the opening credits, a soldier fires his Pedersoli Brown Bess in slow motion and you can watch the frizzen open, then rebound hitting the flint again, and then open again. I call them "bobblehead" frizzens because they wobble around like the bobbleheads people put in the rear windows of their cars. The beginning also shows a line of British soldiers firing their muskets. If you look closely, only half of the muskets fire.
Bob Roller,
Thanks for commenting. The frizzen sparked pretty well when I got the lock. I improved it by case hardening the frizzen in charcoal for 2 hours. Then tempering it properly.
dave