I had a friend bring me an old Belgium made trade gun to look at, and see if it might be in good enough shape to shoot. I took it apart and examined all the crucial parts to make sure it was safe. When I got to looking at the barrel I found that it had a spot on the underside of the barrel that looked like it had been repaired. After cleaning the repair’, I found that it likely was repaired after its proofing in Belgium. The small crack had been sweat brazed closed and had not created problem for the rest of the guns working life.
So, on your gun, I would put the lug in the generous dovetail, and braze it in place. And don’t forget to give any new owner a heads up about the repair. I’m sure we won’t have to worry about you overloading it, you’ll be thinking about that lug every time you pull the trigger.
Hungry Horse
First dovetails are HUGE stress risers. Second it could very easily crack at the bottom of the dovetail. .100 is WAY too deep for any 12L14 barrel unless extremely heavy. I have seen photos of a TC Hawken that developed a crack in the bottom of the underlug dovetail (the made them FAR too deep too, about .100”.
People can do what they like but I would always keep the shooters head between me and the barrel while it was being fired if it was impractical to move out of range to the frag.
Proofing a barrel made of 12L14 is not a “proof”. It could actually set up a failure.
AND I bet that dovetail filler if proved double powder charge, 140-150 gr of FFF and 2 balls its will show a “bulge”there with a tight patch on a short jag.
Finally just up from the breech is the perfect place to suffer hand damage if it fails in 10 or 100 or whatever shots. Cause it cannot be predicted. I would not even shoot a 1137 barrel with this damage.
If the barrel has .012” deep grooves and assuming the bore is centered the barrel we have a barrel wall of .168-.100”+ .068” Not worth the risk. The fact that there is a stress riser involved makes it worse IMO.
Did I mention that heating leaded steels to brazing temps (way past incandescence, according the Jim Kelly (the metallurgist who IIRC used to post here now and then till the “experts” gave him $#@* and he washed his hands) is a bad idea?
Belgium made? Many of these barrels would fail English proof from my reading. AND iron, if its decent quality, is actually a better barrel material than cold rolled modern steels.