What is the best way to smooth out a frizzen face? I have two very noticeable gouges in the frizzen face of my .58 that I would like to take out if possible, otherwise I may have to get a new frizzen.
The problem seems to be with flint position. If I adjust the flint so that it is approximately 1/16" off the face of the frizzen at half ****, it will sometimes hang up on the high point between the two gouges, but when it doesn't it provides a good shower of sparks to the pan but causes the flint to wear faster. When the flint needs to be dressed, I have to move it out so that it actually touches the frizzen at half ****, and then it is not giving a reliable spark.Is it causing a problem other then looking at?
It's a L&R early classic lock. The flint strikes at about 60 degrees to the frizzen, and that is where the gouging is taking place. I will try shimming the back of the flint up so that it strikes the frizzen at a sharper angle to see if that works better. I still think I will have to grind out the area that is gouged so that the flint can shave the face of the frizzen instead of "digging in".If you are getting strike lines that are too deep, the flint is hitting at too square an angle to the frizzen. The hammer/**** needs to be bent down slightly or the back of the flint shimmed up to make the strike at a more oblique/slicing angle. Shimming will let you experiment without any permanent changes to see if you want to bend the hammer down a little. Fred Stutzenberger has had a series of articles in Muzzle Blasts about that very subject. What lock is it?
I’m going to post a reply here rather than start a new thread on an often posted topic.
I got a new to me 1816 Harpers Ferry delivered over the weekend with a “jacked” frizzen face (see attached pics). I’ve had one in the past albeit with a repro frizzen and never had a problem with sparks on that musket. However, seeing this is an original in this condition, is there ANY hope of it sparking? I did sandpaper it a bit and managed a couple sparks both before and after sanding but nothing consistent and no shower. I flipped the flint and again got nothing to write home about.
Both frizzen and mainspring springs are solid and if I had weak thumbs, I wouldn’t be able to **** the hammer.
I will try a leather thong and/or toothpicks to angle the flint down.
Is there any other recommendation(s) I should try or anything I should do first?
Any tips or tricks not mentioned above would be much appreciated!
Humbly yours,
James
Just get it re-soled and it will be fine.
This.That’s an option, not a cheap option though and it’s more valuable in its original form, I’d replace it.
It's a L&R early classic lock. The flint strikes at about 60 degrees to the frizzen, and that is where the gouging is taking place. I will try shimming the back of the flint up so that it strikes the frizzen at a sharper angle to see if that works better. I still think I will have to grind out the area that is gouged so that the flint can shave the face of the frizzen instead of "digging in".
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