I write the newsletter for The Montana Historical Gunmakers Guild and just did a column on sear nose and notch angles. But I went with the safer idea of working on the spring first.
The sear notch and sear nose should not have an identical angle. The notch angle should have, IMO, an angle that will “trap” the sear nose slightly. Just enough that the sear will stay and position under mainspring tension with no sear spring pressure. This makes the lock safer. But it need not have a “hook” stops the sear from smoothly coming out of the notch. It is not unusual to find such things.
If the angles of teh sear nose and notch are exactly the same the lock may be safe enough but it may result in a long “drag” to get the seat out of the notch. Especially if the trigger pivot is too close the the sear contact point.. If the angles are slightly different as show in the “ok” drawing the sear will stay in position until some pressure builds and then tend to “pop” out of the notch giving a quick “break” with no feeling of movement of the trigger.
The 1/2 cock issue. I used to work at a place where the machinist/took and die maker owner had “fixed” the lock by greatly deepening to full cock. If the notch was brought down to the proper depth the sear would hit the 1/2 cock. So to fix this on the rifles I did for me I added metal or a screw to the tumbler to stop the seat from going to deep.
As a side note I used to do gun work for a country music singer. I rebuilt a hammer on a pistol and it workd fine, for me. Sent it off and he immediately called about the trigger hitting the 1/2 or 1/4 cock. I told him it had worked fine for me.. He said “you are not a guitar player”. He could stop the trigger when the sear cleared the notch, no over travel. He sent it back I welded up the full cock, again, and recut it. The difference was very slight. But… So this is a very real issue if one starts to play with notches on the tumbler.
This is my two cents worth. To start playing with the full cock notch requires the proper tools and some thinking.
Fly/detent…
You should not rely on the fly to compensate for a “goofed” full cock notch. Yes it will “lift” the sear over the 1/2 cock.
HOWEVER, it can cause wild variations in hammer fall if too much mainspring energy is used doing this. To this day there are dedicated unmentionable target rifles of 19th c design with NO 1/2 cock for this very reason and it was done “back in the day” as well. And I have done this. One in particular is very sensitive to this and the resulting accuracy “errors” are so extreme as to be hard to believe. While it may not cause ignition issues with a flintlock or even a percussion it can cause damage to the sear nose. So all these things must be balanced and work smoothly together. And there were late percussion era locks with no 1/2 cock. Cheaper to make…..