Larks
40 Cal
I’d appreciate some advice on this one before I do something drastic and irreparable.........like grinding the end of my sear spring down and reshaping/rehardening it:
It’s on my TRS Baker Rifle lock (the kit, not the completed lock) and I’ve fitted the springs pretty much in the shape that they came aside from polishing and hardening them and all but the sear spring seem perfect.
As the sear spring sits at the moment I don’t seem to be getting enough pressure on the sear to lock it into the tumbler at half and full cock. It will lock in positively if I add light pressure to the sear myself but not quite under the weight of the spring alone.
I can’t get a good clear photo but the spring seems to sit just in the crook of the sear arm and the sear screw casement (from want of a better way of describing it..).
So my question is: would I be on the right track in filing off two or three millimetres from the toe of the sear spring to make it sit more positively on the actual arm (?) of the sear, then heat and open up the angle very slightly and reharden it?
It’s on my TRS Baker Rifle lock (the kit, not the completed lock) and I’ve fitted the springs pretty much in the shape that they came aside from polishing and hardening them and all but the sear spring seem perfect.
As the sear spring sits at the moment I don’t seem to be getting enough pressure on the sear to lock it into the tumbler at half and full cock. It will lock in positively if I add light pressure to the sear myself but not quite under the weight of the spring alone.
I can’t get a good clear photo but the spring seems to sit just in the crook of the sear arm and the sear screw casement (from want of a better way of describing it..).
So my question is: would I be on the right track in filing off two or three millimetres from the toe of the sear spring to make it sit more positively on the actual arm (?) of the sear, then heat and open up the angle very slightly and reharden it?