Traditional Muzzleloading Association
Shooting Traditional Firearms and Weapons => General Interest => Topic started by: Hota on November 05, 2012, 08:20:23 PM
-
Well, i am nearly done my build. I got it all together, threw a coat of stain on the stock and rubbed one application of linssed oil in, all metal still in the white. Went to the range to sight it in and at the point of climax........chit, no spark, again no spark, dang! I swapped out flints and again nothing. The frizzen showed scrapes with some depth so the fear was it was too soft. Back to the shop. Paul Allison heated the frizzen up to red hot temps and then doused in whale sperm oil. Tested with a swipe of a file and strip.....bright metal. Ok maybe hotter the next time around. Same thing, no spark. So I contacted Jim Chambers and he said to send it back and he would harden it for me. What a great guy to deal with. So the project is delayed a week or so, will be back up and running soon. Anyone else ever deal with a frizzen too soft? How did you deal with it?
-
Have an L & R Queen Ann round face lock that was that way. Brand new, sent it off to the lock doctor who tuned and hardened it. Still had problems with spark, so talked to the L & R boys, they had me switch to a smaller flint which made the gap at half cock from flint to frizzen about an inch or so, said thats just the configuration of those locks, and it has fired fine since then. I would have never guessed.
-
I had a soft frizzen on a Siler, once. Sent it back and no more trouble at all.
-
Got my frizzen back from chambers. Great spark now! Awesome customer service.