• 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

L&R Pistol lock

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Dec 26, 2020
Messages
1,212
Reaction score
1,806
Location
Arkansas, Boston Mountains
OK,

So I got one more question for today an will leave y’all alone for a bit. I got a Kentucky pistol that needs some help with the trigger. Where do I focus the stone? The sear or on that thin piece of steel on the trigger?

I’m sure they have different names as to what I’m giving them but I think y’all understand what I’m getting at. I have the necessary equipment to handle this job but just not sure which one I need to focus my attention on.

Thoughts?

RM
 

Attachments

  • C1360E64-D9B3-4E6B-AB38-F3E75EEC0DBF.jpeg
    C1360E64-D9B3-4E6B-AB38-F3E75EEC0DBF.jpeg
    1.7 MB
OK, not sur if this is what ya want.
 

Attachments

  • 5A3CD24C-0B32-4691-837F-A37DA8CBEA54.jpeg
    5A3CD24C-0B32-4691-837F-A37DA8CBEA54.jpeg
    1.3 MB
  • 728DCD2E-264A-4C59-95E3-2710DA3D3200.jpeg
    728DCD2E-264A-4C59-95E3-2710DA3D3200.jpeg
    1.2 MB
  • 51FD10CA-DBEB-4E89-8F0A-64C130329C02.jpeg
    51FD10CA-DBEB-4E89-8F0A-64C130329C02.jpeg
    1.2 MB
  • 0C4B60FC-204D-4371-A860-954AFEA91548.jpeg
    0C4B60FC-204D-4371-A860-954AFEA91548.jpeg
    947.2 KB
just as Flintlokr says, all, ALL, rubbing surfaces need polished. including the lock plate where the tumbler rubs, the shoulder of the tumbler, the face of the tumbler where the sear bears, the underside of the bridle that bears on the tumbler. this takes complete disassembly of the lock.
the under side of the sear arm also needs polished. also polish the top of the trigger blade. there are many other things involved in modifying the weight of pull, creep, and crispness of the lock/trigger. weird things such as depth of the inlet for the trigger plate if the trigger has one. placement of the trigger in relation of the sear arm influences weight and travel also.
without seeing the trigger and its placement i am useless to advise.
another cause of sponginess/heavy pull can be wood rubbing from too shallow of inletting for the parts or too deep of inletting of the plate.
hope this makes some sense and helps.
 
So, while I’m waiting on the new main spring, I took some pics of the tumbler and sear. I have not touched it yet.
 

Attachments

  • E688B966-41FF-422C-BD72-FE84AEFDA468.jpeg
    E688B966-41FF-422C-BD72-FE84AEFDA468.jpeg
    814.5 KB
  • 9C63F2BB-F77B-4B1C-A869-2220C9A52F26.jpeg
    9C63F2BB-F77B-4B1C-A869-2220C9A52F26.jpeg
    1,021.3 KB
  • 2F23268B-ADAB-42FB-9176-6BADBFCD91D6.jpeg
    2F23268B-ADAB-42FB-9176-6BADBFCD91D6.jpeg
    956.8 KB
  • CD247264-D385-4C0E-BFC0-CC3698182D35.jpeg
    CD247264-D385-4C0E-BFC0-CC3698182D35.jpeg
    1,019.4 KB
Back
Top