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- Nov 26, 2005
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Hi,
I have to apologize, Brian. I was completely wrong about your locks. Boy, sometimes I need to recheck my references before I open my mouth because I forget things. I take back what I said about the locks not being like the originals. I looked at my copy of O'Sullivan and Bailey's new book on Wogdon and low and behold Wogdon's locks before about 1780 or so look very close to yours with hooked mainsprings and tumblers without stirrups. My locks represent his fully evolved design from the late 1780s. The implication, assuming the reproductions are accurate, is the the original pistols were made during the 1770s or very early 1780s before Wogdon switched over to stirrup tumblers and pierced bridles. In addition, the Hamilton-Burr pistols have simple fences on the pans not ones with a rain gutters such as my copies. So the pistols when bought by John Church (Hamilton's brother in law) probably in the late 1770s or early 1780s, likely had full walnut stocks, no checkering, and no stirrups on the trigger guards. The heavy brass or bronze forestocks, checkering, and stirrups were added later. The metal ramrods almost certainly are replacements for the original wooden rods. Wogdon appears to have been very conservative and held on to older features longer than other London makers. He was no slave to changes in fashion. While stirrups linking tumbler and mainspring add mechanical advantage affecting the force needed to pull the cock back to full, well designed springs with simple hooks can be pretty darn good. If the hook slides all the way up the toe of the tumbler so that when the lock is pulled to full cock, the end of the hook is tucked right in the corner of the toe and as close to the tumbler axel as possible, the lock will feel and function very like it had a stirrup link. I don't doubt your locks work well if they are close to the originals.
dave
I have to apologize, Brian. I was completely wrong about your locks. Boy, sometimes I need to recheck my references before I open my mouth because I forget things. I take back what I said about the locks not being like the originals. I looked at my copy of O'Sullivan and Bailey's new book on Wogdon and low and behold Wogdon's locks before about 1780 or so look very close to yours with hooked mainsprings and tumblers without stirrups. My locks represent his fully evolved design from the late 1780s. The implication, assuming the reproductions are accurate, is the the original pistols were made during the 1770s or very early 1780s before Wogdon switched over to stirrup tumblers and pierced bridles. In addition, the Hamilton-Burr pistols have simple fences on the pans not ones with a rain gutters such as my copies. So the pistols when bought by John Church (Hamilton's brother in law) probably in the late 1770s or early 1780s, likely had full walnut stocks, no checkering, and no stirrups on the trigger guards. The heavy brass or bronze forestocks, checkering, and stirrups were added later. The metal ramrods almost certainly are replacements for the original wooden rods. Wogdon appears to have been very conservative and held on to older features longer than other London makers. He was no slave to changes in fashion. While stirrups linking tumbler and mainspring add mechanical advantage affecting the force needed to pull the cock back to full, well designed springs with simple hooks can be pretty darn good. If the hook slides all the way up the toe of the tumbler so that when the lock is pulled to full cock, the end of the hook is tucked right in the corner of the toe and as close to the tumbler axel as possible, the lock will feel and function very like it had a stirrup link. I don't doubt your locks work well if they are close to the originals.
dave