• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

DIY Side Hammer lock?

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Wudsruner

32 Cal
Joined
Sep 3, 2020
Messages
18
Reaction score
1
Has anyone created a completely homemade side Hammer lock, and do they have any pictures/diagrams? All of the diagrams I have seen do not do a great job (or I might not be the brightest candle in the camp). Also, what are the benefits of a side Hammer vs a normal percussion lock?

I have bought a numrich 12 gauge barrel, a tap and a breech plug to complete a shotgun barrel. I have a 2x6 ready to make a stock out of, and lots of good 1/4" 5160 leaf spring for a lock. Cheap squirrel blaster!
 
Here's a couple of photos of the L&R side hammer lock (cost about $120) - it is 5 in. long x 15/16 in. tall. This lock has a half **** on it.
201- 5in x 15-16 same as Durs Egg plate.jpg202.jpg

The benefit of the side hammer (aka mule ear) lock is it is simpler to make because it has less parts - no separate tumbler, no bridle, - the thicker lockplate is the bridle and it eliminates about 4 screws too. The nipple is located directly next to the powder charge providing faster ignition like many underhammer weapons do.

hope this helps some, Mike
 
Here's a couple of photos of the L&R side hammer lock (cost about $120) - it is 5 in. long x 15/16 in. tall. This lock has a half **** on it.
View attachment 44839View attachment 44840

The benefit of the side hammer (aka mule ear) lock is it is simpler to make because it has less parts - no separate tumbler, no bridle, - the thicker lockplate is the bridle and it eliminates about 4 screws too. The nipple is located directly next to the powder charge providing faster ignition like many underhammer weapons do.

hope this helps some, Mike
Thank you for the help Mike, would an underhammer be simpler to make? I am 16 and my workshop has a decent amount of tools (I have already built a black iron pipe "apocalypse" muzzleloader just to see if I could do it) and I have made a very simple lock copied from a Russian guy who made his own musket. Here is the lock mechanism. It works fine, but would an underhammer work better/be simpler to make?
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_20200930-144520.png
    Screenshot_20200930-144520.png
    1.3 MB
google hardware store pistol
I applaud your efforts, but please only use LIGHT CHARGES OF Black Powder or a Black Powder substitute. A local youth lost his hand due to a homemade firearm.
I don't think he should use any powder charge to fire his black iron pipe gun.
Black iron pipe is intended to work at pressures up to 150 pounds per square inch. Even a very light amount of black powder will make pressures that will be much larger and dangerously over-pressure the barrel.

For example, a 30 grain load of black powder under a roundball in a .54 caliber barrel will make pressures that are over 5500 psi. That's almost 37 times the pressure that black iron pipe is designed to handle.

Wudsruner: If you don't know how much 30 grains of black powder is, that would be about the same as a cube that was 1/2" wide by 1/2" deep by 1/2" tall.
Don't shoot your home made black pipe gun.
 
I was merely pointing to that due to the lock making process the guy went thru. Agreed, black pipe is no good at all
 
Wudsrunner , look up JACO-kentucky-bp-rifle pdf. You will find a fairly simple percussion lock though not a side slapped. It can ne made with hand tools but some power tools would be a plus. I did this using JACO as a starting placeimage.jpeg
 
Here's a couple of photos of the L&R side hammer lock (cost about $120) - it is 5 in. long x 15/16 in. tall. This lock has a half **** on it.
View attachment 44839View attachment 44840

The benefit of the side hammer (aka mule ear) lock is it is simpler to make because it has less parts - no separate tumbler, no bridle, - the thicker lockplate is the bridle and it eliminates about 4 screws too. The nipple is located directly next to the powder charge providing faster ignition like many underhammer weapons do.

hope this helps some, Mike
it has the potential of hanging up on brush in laurel thicket's.JMHO.
 
Muley.jpg


Well here are two of mine! The one shown < in the foreground > is MY design using an outside mainspring..

Respect Always
Metalshaper/Jonathan
 

Latest posts

Back
Top