Hi Hank,
As someone who routinely does tasks that others would call a "waste of time", "too much work", "couldn't pay me enough to do it" and so forth, I applaud you for this project. Your locks look like accurate renditions of the locks on the Bailes gun and as such and considering the time of the piece, don't represent the fully evolved English flintlocks of the 1790s and later. So we should not expect them to function as well as those later locks.
Bailes did not make the locks, the lock forger, lock filer, and lock polisher did. They represent close to state of the art during the 1760s when there was a transition away from round faced locks to flat faced locks on guns of quality. In this case, the lock maker has a particular problem to overcome. The locks need to be small but also wide enough to handle the large breeching of the barrels. Hence, the odd shape of the feather spring. The top leaf of the spring is steeply angled upward because the plate is wide. It is not optimum but a compromise given the requirements of the lock. I urge you also to consider a taller stud or tab on the end of the mainspring so the upper leaf sits even lower on the plate below the bolster. I would hesitate to use any L&R mainspring design as a model. Your deep bolster, based I assume on a modern lock, may not be how the original locks were made. You can achieve the same geometry by having a narrower bolster and taller stud on the mainspring. Also I urge you to shape the hook on the mainspring such that the end sits a little way up the foot of the tumbler when at rest and slides fully into the corner (instep) of the tumbler when at full cock. That will give the lock maximum mechanical advantage sans a tumbler stirrup. The photos below show Wogdon pistol locks. The maker had to solve a problem similar to yours in that these are very small locks but the barrels they are fitted to are fairly large at the breech. In the first photo note the tall stud on the main spring.
In this second photo, note the position of the hook on the tumbler foot at rest.
Here it is at full cock. Also note the shape of the end of the hook. It is not just rounded over, rather it is spoon shaped such that the angle of the bottom sliding on the tumbler is perfectly matched to the angle of the foot
These are "state of the art" for the period 1770-1779, not much later than your Bailes gun.
dave