For an inexpensive heat scale preventer, I've always used Boric Acid.
I was shown the trick very early on in the early 70's when making engraving tools, punches etc.
Hardening them w/o heat scale forming was a must.
A jewelry engraver showed me to use Boric Acid. It was used quite a bit in that trade when hard soldering.
It comes in powdered form and from the drug store,,or you can easily buy it by the pound now on Ebay and other places on the net.
This will be 'pure' Boric Acid and works the best.
Common ant & roach killer powder from the garden center is also Boric Acid (99%). I've used that a few times but with not as good results as I will explain.
The powdered Boric Acid is simply mixed with alcohol to a paste.
Then the metal is coated with the paste.
Brush it on or dip the part(s) into it.
Small tools like the gravers and punches we just dipped the ends in the stuff and built up layers like making a candle.
The alcohol dries off fast, but you can light up the coating and burn the excess alcohol off. That leaves the coating a hard shell. Fragile,,but air tight.
Now heat to the temp you need for HT. When you quench, the 'shell' will break/shatter and leave the part clear and clean of any scale. The steel will be light grey in color.
Used inside a bbl bore the paste can be thinned quite a bit and a few layers built up on the bores surface. Then allowed to dry or burn it off.
Not being something that you will quench obviously but just let the solder joint cool on it's own,,the coating will be there when the job is done.
At that time you can remove the still hard shell by inserting the muzzle into boiling water to disolve the Boric Acid.
In using the insecticide Boric Acid, I found that it did not form the smooth coating on the surface as it did when using the pure form. Both mixed the same with alcohol.
The insecticide version then did not form the best 'shell' around the part when heated leaving a few very tiny holes in it where small discolorations from the HT scale (?) showed on the final surface . Nothing major on a punch but not something I would want on the surface of a bbl bore.
I'm guessing that somewhere in the inactive 1% ingredients there may be something like a filler, clay, silica or something like that that interupts the pure boric acid from completly forming the shell around the part.
The insecticide Boric acid shell did not completely shatter and break free of the surface during quenching when used that way in most instances either. Some remained on the surfaces but would eventually disolve in the same boiling water after treatment.
On the Musket bbl loops,,I'd cut a very shallow dovetail for them,,very shallow.
Kick the insides of the dovetails open with a chisel to increase their height above the bbl surface.
Then fit the loop into place securely in that dovetail along with soft soldering them in place.
Or just soft soldering in place with a well fitted concave base to fit bbl contour.
Properly fitted and sweat soldered, they will not come un-done.
Bayonet Lug,,I would probably High Temp Hard Solder and use anti scale technique.