Is that where a sear bar that comes below the bottom of the lock blows the wood out if the hammer is let down without a nipple or with the barrel off ?
Bingo! Also with wear a sear bar often drops below the lock plate. If the lock is removed and reinstalled for cleaning this is bound to happen.
That can happen with the sear bar and it will only occur at the REAR of the lock inlet.Forward of that will probably be a mainspring link.
The whole thing looks like a low end job to me.A powerful mainspring can.if it breaks can knock the bottom off of a lock mortise and
in the past I got a number of requests for forged springs to replace too stiff cast springs that had created catastrophic failures in nice rifle
stocks.I told them to return the lock and the bill to fix the stock to the lock maker IF it could be fixed.None of these people would buy a lock from me because I insisted until the day I made the last one in 2019 for the time and skill involved in this type of work.Fine wood,good barrels and small trim and cheap locks were the thing then.
Bob Roller