ebiggs said:
Yeah, that may be true but guys on this board have their favorites and lump the rest into the “cheap” category. When asked they are unable or unwilling to name them by brand.
Its all relative.
Compared to a best quality English lock 1750-1850 everything on the market is low quality
Chambers locks are good, Davis is good, L&R has good designs but execution is sometimes lacking.
ALL the mass produced "factory" locks are worse. Used to be that virtually everything from Italy was at best suspect. THEN they learned people were actually shooting the things. Quality improved. Cowboy Action shooters shooting a LOT forced further improvements.
The Pedersoli Sharps is actually a copy of the Shiloh not an original. They always had good barrels but the rest was pretty flaky but BPCR silhouette helped improve these.
It may come as a shock to people here but even a low quality POS will often go "bang" everytime. This not an indicator of quality.
BTW I also started with a cheap DGW lock in the 60s. But I switched to Russ Hamm locks after one DGW. These were much better but had problems that could produce accidental discharges if not further tuned.
The traditional side lock cannot be made by unskilled workers without corner cutting.
But people think a best quality lock should cost 100-140 bucks. In reality a best quality lock would cost 250-300 if made to the level of a 1810 Joe Manton lock.
But Americans won't pay this much for a lock.
So if you want a good lock that will work properly by a Chambers or a Davis. L&R has some excellent designs but they may require a couple of hours of skilled labor after they arrive.
Remember that the locks of the past were made by people who passed through a lock filers apprentice program in Europe.
Modern mass produced locks like TC are designed to be assembled by relatively unskilled labor. So there are shortcuts.
But lots of people like TCs so making a statement like this opens the person making the statement to attacks.
Invariably by people who could not make a lock from scratch but are "experts" because they can swap parts in a lock designed to be assembled by anyone off the street with 15 minutes training.
Dan