That was my guess also.Hi,
My first guess without a photo of the lock is that your flint is too big. How long and wide is the flint you are using and what is the model L&R lock?
dave
That was my guess also.Hi,
My first guess without a photo of the lock is that your flint is too big. How long and wide is the flint you are using and what is the model L&R lock?
dave
Flatter flint (less hump) and thinner leather. Here are photos of a L&R lock with two different leather thickness hold the same piece of flint (a no hump flint).The top one is the one that I have that issue with. The flint fits fine, and I tighten it down as much as I can. I even had someone else tighten it down, and the flint still flew out. You can see how thick the leather is here, and it has a hole cut into the back. There is still plenty of room for a fatter piece if needed. I am going to see about
the top of it, I haven't had the time to check it. I do have more that I can use, but I would like to be able to stop this issue before I lose them all....
View attachment 17244
Interesting how different folks feel about lead flint wraps. Personally I use leather strips cut from an old belt.Robert the Bruce & the spider .' If at first you don't succeed try try again '. Stay with leather I wouldn't use lead in any small lock . I wish you every success . Regards Rudyard
Cannot find the reference, but remember reading some lock manufactures voided their warranty if lead was used to hold the flint. Thought was additional weight of the lead stressed components. Not sure I buy that.Interesting how different folks feel about lead flint wraps. Personally I use leather strips cut from an old belt.
However, the brand spanking new right out of the box Pedersoli Frontier I bought a short while back came with a lead strip in the jaws, and the "manual" that came with it says to use lead to hold the flint. I didn't, I use and continue to use leather, but even some of the manufacturers recommend lead.
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