when I was 14 yrs old I apprenticed to a master gun smith. he taught me this very video the memories of the sights, sounds and smells came flooding back like it was yesterday. I am 67 yrs now and retired yesterday after 38 yrs as an air traffic controller. I'm sitting in my shop now, and after just watching this video I am not afraid for my future . thank you so much Mark !
Sir, as a repairman in a completely different field I very much enjoy learning from your videos. Some skills transfer, but the wisdom always rings true. It’s a different cat, but it skins out all the same. Fix all the “a problems” and you often fix “the problem”.
This reminded me of one of my black powder 1860 Colt repro's that broke the main spring. It took it to work (P&W in WPB) and had it welded then the guys in heat treat did a full treatment with Rockwell testing included. Turned out great...and is probably the most expensive spring in a black powder gun in the world. Great video Mark!
Hey Mark, I used to have a hobby blacksmith shop where I made knives for about 15 years (before TH-cam lol), my knife tempering changed from “hit or miss” to perfect every time when I started using a magnet to test the red color before I quenched. Get it a little too hot and it gets too much grain growth and it doesn’t matter how well you temper, you still might get breaks. If you just get it hot enough to where a magnet doesn’t stick before the quench, that’s the sweet spot.
I did NOT see the Weld coming! Never thought about the lead pot? Thank you SIR! I would now give Much More Consideration and Value to a non op Historic find! Nothing you did would intimidate me, but I may need a few try's? but I am free for me.
Excellent job and video! One of the greatest indicators of a True Craftsman Gunsmith is the ability to make a flat spring. It's like in blacksmithing, there are anvil looking blocks of metal and anvils. A lot of people can make spring looking things but only a few can make a spring that some Smith will have to be replacing in another 200 years. Beautiful work. Take Care buddy and be safe, John
I have made springs in the past, but never realized I could Tig where the bending isn't and I am a Tig welder. It is great to keep learning, even at 75.
In theory the statement "I need to make a new spring " is one of a fairly simple task. In reality it is one of the more complicated endeavors a Smith may undertake, resulting in a ratio of more failures to successes. Knowing "how" to do it cannot begin to bring into account all the known and unknown variables one can encounter. I'm glad to see the use of the Lyman lead pot, a trick I've been familiar with since about 1974. It gives a constant and controlled temperature to draw back a fabricated spring. Glad to see it being used here. Great job Mark !!! Very well thought out and presented. But most of us should not expect to get it right on the first try. And that is normal and par for the course.
Even though I deal with digital controllers all the time, I still appreciate the old ways. A bimetal element and thermal mass is incredibly elegant and simple. Same for a rotating sprung mass to control speed.
Mark, another awesome video. Highly educational. I'm sure I echo many others that have seen your videos in thanking you for sharing some of the finer points for not only this mainspring video but countless before it. You're a Champ! It so happens that I've got a sorrily made flinter here that broke the spring early on. And it wasn't a great smoke pole anyway since the action lacked a bridle plate. The bridle plate and new screws I can handle. But the book on making early firearm mainsprings I found lacks a lot of the valuable hints you gave in this video. Now I can dive into this project more fully equipped. For us hobbyist shop rats I'm not exaggerating in saying that you're by far the best gunsmithing channel I've found. Please keep up the great work. But don't let this swell up your head and make it hard to fit your hats :D
Mark, you Sir are one of the very few national treasures we have in this world. I could watch you're videos all day long.. I have few pre 1899 pistols I've picked up as projects. One needs a main spring. I just might give it a go after watching this film !!!. Keep up the great work 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 Cheers 🍻
Another quality episode every time I watch there is another thing learned. The knowledge this man has is incredible and it always shows and I’m grateful to watch a highly skilled professional at work. I like that it is no one sense down to earth learning. Mark once again thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience.
Nice trick splitting the fabrication into two parts Mark .While I've stocked many ML guns from both precarves and blanks ... the intricacies of the flint lock itself and it's tuning I've always farmed out. Thank you so much for showing this ! There just aren't many 'smiths who know how to repair this seemingly simple mechanism. A lot of machinists think they can do gunsmithing and a lot of modern gunsmiths think they can fix muzzleloaders .
Very informative...I’ve made springs, and your explanations will help me next time...I temper my springs by putting them in a pan,covering them with oil, then setting the oil on fire..after it’s burned up, the spring needs cleaned and is ready...learned it from an old timer at friendship many years ago
This oil method works well, however I find that you can only achieve 1 possible hardness/draw result. I need to play with the temper/draw/thickness/shape to reverse engineer into the remanufactured part. Lots of correct ways to skin this cat..,..
@Mark, looking at 6:50 that's not the "cheater's way", that is the blacksmithing way! I do blacksmithing as a hobby and as soon as you took out the hacksaw I knew what you were going to do. Of course doing this on an anvil would be even easier as you could just fuller that notch using the edge of the anvil face, bend it over with a hammer blow, and then clean up the twist bit with a half face blow.
This one was touch and go for me to watch; I cringe at how fast a pro works (and can talk at the same time), but the final product is perfection! Fantastic!
You had my full attention and a new subscriber with the first minute and 25 seconds. Wowee cool skill set, knowledge, and arsenal of tools in that workshop you’ve got sir.
mark , some of us out here .( are ) wanna- be gunsmiths....you give hope to the hopeless...you give faith to the faithless...you give odor to the odorless. ..........................................thanks, mark.
Very nice episode mark, especially because you also discussed the heat treating. I'm professionally very involved with making temperature control systems for heat treatment (incl. PWHT post weld heat treatment) and really like that you showed this classic way of heat treating that we can also do in our home workshop!
Loved this episode Mark! That's really informative. I had no idea that you could float steel on molten lead. Thinking logically though it's a no brainier when you look at the density. Perhaps for upmarket gun springs you should temper in molten gold! lol
My Nepalese Brunswick copy has a broken spring. I might have to give this a shot for a replacement. My Snider Enfield also had a broken spring, but replacements were available and that was an easy swap to get it back into action.
The melting point of pure lead is a very precise temperature reference at 621.5F (327.5C). It can be used as a calibration check for high temperature thermometers. The freezing point of zinc is however better.
Thank you, thank you, thank you!!! I am a woodworker that has always envied you metal workers. I now have a new appreciation for the "magic" that you guys possess. And you explained it so well that even this German/Norwegian/American could understand
As a warning, cooling in oil isn't nessesarily slower... it will be on very small items like these springs, but for larger/hotter steel sections the evaporation causes the steel to be insulated from the water, while the vastly higher boiling point, lower expansion rate, and endothermic decomposition of oil will allow it to continue to extract a high degree of energy. For this reason the fairly soft temper of the large rolls of steel sold for automotive fabrication is actually attained by submerging the entire roll and letting it flash boil for over an hour... to attain higher hardnesses fan, or forced jet water sprayers are used. Its not something even a home shop should forget either, as the same practice that works for guns lock spring, will garner a fairly different result on a barrel, car's leaf spring, or a sword blade (even between a sword and an axe you'll require to experiment several times to dial it in... so make sure thats on scrap metal FIRST, not a customers job you've got 20 hours into).
Mark, your disclaimer at the beginning got me thinking. I will never possess the skill to refurbish, conserve or in any other way fiddle with firearms other than at a very basic level [giving a stock some love, cleaning stuff up and replacing minor broken things with ready made parts, etc.]. However, I have used the things you demonstrated to rust blue tools, bringing life back to beat up old wood furniture, and tinker around with various projects in my --jerry rigged propane stove-- forge. A deep thank you from --BFE-- --the frozen craphole of Hoth-- Northeast Ohio.
@@marknovak8255 Okay.... I am afraid I don't understand your reply. I worry that I pissed you off in some way. Probably my low IQ showing itself. (Wouldn't be the first time I was guilty of being too stupid to understand something, or irritated someone by saying something moronic... my ex wife can vouch for that.) I hope I didn't offend you by being off topic or something. I was just floored that somebody I am a fan of grew up relatively nearby. Again, my apologies. Anyway, have a good evening.
You are correct and assuming that I am very average and that I have a lead pot. I also have a thermometer similar to yours so you have made tempering a lot more easy and precise for me I've seen the same thing used for assault bath bluing and various brass annealing, but it just didn't occur to me that I had the ability to precisely temper springs with tools I already had.
I can't understand why you didn't subscribe on watching your very first video whichever one it was, coz they're all brilliant. I no longer shoot or have anything to do with guns here in the UK as our laws are so draconian, but I used to both shoot and do my own gun smithing and I subscribed on my very first Anvil video.
I had never considered how flintlocks work. Never shot one so I didn't appreciate what the cock has to do to function properly. Outstanding presentation, sir.
Down the rabbit hole and thirty four minutes and change later I've been kicked out of wonderland again, but it was great while it lasted. Sir, I wonder if you shall ever lead us through the looking glass... ?
I can’t even imagine the hours and frustrations expended to have the experience to get this right the first time, Mark. Inspiring video. Regards, Marky
Ive never handled a gun or done any serious machining or metalwork but I enjoying watching a true craftsman and appreciate the amount of work and skill involved in repairing a firearm like this. If I had another life I think id want to learn to be a maker of firearms. Im not saying I'd be any good though...lol
I use car leaf spring steel to make new springs...... heat red and anneal, cut and file to shape and fit, heat to non-magnetic, quench in cool oil..... heat gently in a flame until the oil just flashes off, and its ready..... works well
I have a 1801 1795 Springfield pattern Eli Whitney contract musket issued to Maryland troops. It was converted to a percussion system for use in the Civil War. It is completely original other than a commercial hammer and the frizzen removed and reworked from a blacksmith's addition of a cone and drum. The only part broken is the sear spring. At some time in the future I hope you could do a video on making a new one. Great instructional info.
I almost can’t believe you get paid to mess around and fix those amazing “tools”. I understand in the end it’s a job and a daily grind, but hell, what a way to be able to make a living. I will never get to see, much less touch all those gems.
I hope we get Anvili 017 back one of these days, just because I want to listen to Mark's rant about people taunting the Buckingham Palace guards again. :)
Great video. I use an oven to temper stuff, same principle but I like to soak for an hour then repeat two or three times. Knifemakers tend to be steel geeks
A-good source of thin spring material is metal leaf rakes. The individual tines are really easily made over and take heat treatment really well. Many such rakes also have 3/16 to1/4” springs included as a stiffener on the back. I have never used them on guns but i have used them for antique engine repairs. Particularly in and around governors and carburetors.
In this flash in the pan episode: Mark gets the lead out, checks his temper, and springs into action.
Beautiful.
Ugh, bad pun! Good video!
Raycharles.jpg
I see what you did there.
L⅘
Owl ship!
when I was 14 yrs old I apprenticed to a master gun smith. he taught me this very video the memories of the sights, sounds and smells came flooding back like it was yesterday. I am 67 yrs now and retired yesterday after 38 yrs as an air traffic controller. I'm sitting in my shop now, and after just watching this video I am not afraid for my future . thank you so much Mark !
Congrats, enjoy it! You've earned it! I hope to make it to retirement lol
Mark just has a way to entertain and make you learn along the way.
Time Very Well spent IMHO .
Thanks Mark and Crew.
as one of the ladies i heavily appreciate the information and learning and asmr elements to these videos! thank you very much for makin em!
You are very welcome. Great to have you aboard
The countdown to the end of 2017 was interesting.... I like to look at other content creators, and very few actually post anything. Keep it up.
WOW, LOVED the Twisted Sister reference "...make us worthless and weak!" You do great work Mark, thank you for your efforts!
Another fantastic trip down the rabbit hole of knowledge.
Sir, as a repairman in a completely different field I very much enjoy learning from your videos. Some skills transfer, but the wisdom always rings true. It’s a different cat, but it skins out all the same. Fix all the “a problems” and you often fix “the problem”.
I never gave spring tension a second thought. Now I have a new respect for the springsmith.
A man that knows his subject, but also knows how to communicate that knowledge to others, has mastered his craft. And is entitled to be called Master.
Love the lead bath temper! I wouldn't have thought of that😊
Wow. Best explanation of how to heat-treat, and annealing.
This reminded me of one of my black powder 1860 Colt repro's that broke the main spring. It took it to work (P&W in WPB) and had it welded then the guys in heat treat did a full treatment with Rockwell testing included. Turned out great...and is probably the most expensive spring in a black powder gun in the world. Great video Mark!
Hard core
21:00 This level of skill and craftsmanship is why I am here.
Hey Mark, I used to have a hobby blacksmith shop where I made knives for about 15 years (before TH-cam lol), my knife tempering changed from “hit or miss” to perfect every time when I started using a magnet to test the red color before I quenched. Get it a little too hot and it gets too much grain growth and it doesn’t matter how well you temper, you still might get breaks. If you just get it hot enough to where a magnet doesn’t stick before the quench, that’s the sweet spot.
As a 15-year TH-cam Account Holder, I can safely say that this channel, and C&RSenal are in my top 2 favorite channels.....
I'd add Forgotten Weapons into that duo to make it a Trio.
@@MrDmitriRavenoff InRangeTV too
Mark- I was going to ask you to do a video on spring making, and here it is! Now make some coil springs.
He made coil springs in the Pedersen device episode
@@AlbertaPL Thank you. I'll look it up.
After that 10 hour shift I just worked, watching you work was a joy Mr. Novak.
Again, I bow to the miracle worker. Many thanks for educating us.
I did NOT see the Weld coming! Never thought about the lead pot?
Thank you SIR! I would now give Much More Consideration and Value to a non op Historic find! Nothing you did would intimidate me, but I may need a few try's? but I am free for me.
Excellent job and video!
One of the greatest indicators of a True Craftsman Gunsmith is the ability to make a flat spring. It's like in blacksmithing, there are anvil looking blocks of metal and anvils. A lot of people can make spring looking things but only a few can make a spring that some Smith will have to be replacing in another 200 years. Beautiful work.
Take Care buddy and be safe, John
I have made springs in the past, but never realized I could Tig where the bending isn't and I am a Tig welder. It is great to keep learning, even at 75.
In theory the statement "I need to make a new spring " is one of a fairly simple task. In reality it is one of the more complicated endeavors a Smith may undertake, resulting in a ratio of more failures to successes. Knowing "how" to do it cannot begin to bring into account all the known and unknown variables one can encounter. I'm glad to see the use of the Lyman lead pot, a trick I've been familiar with since about 1974. It gives a constant and controlled temperature to draw back a fabricated spring. Glad to see it being used here. Great job Mark !!! Very well thought out and presented. But most of us should not expect to get it right on the first try. And that is normal and par for the course.
Well said. Thanks
Even though I deal with digital controllers all the time, I still appreciate the old ways. A bimetal element and thermal mass is incredibly elegant and simple. Same for a rotating sprung mass to control speed.
@@AM-hf9kk Something to be said for Bang Bang control and the Watt flyball governor.......
Thank u Mark for this episode wich content gave me more than enough class in 35 minutes than an average person has to study a half year for
Mark, another awesome video. Highly educational. I'm sure I echo many others that have seen your videos in thanking you for sharing some of the finer points for not only this mainspring video but countless before it. You're a Champ!
It so happens that I've got a sorrily made flinter here that broke the spring early on. And it wasn't a great smoke pole anyway since the action lacked a bridle plate. The bridle plate and new screws I can handle. But the book on making early firearm mainsprings I found lacks a lot of the valuable hints you gave in this video. Now I can dive into this project more fully equipped.
For us hobbyist shop rats I'm not exaggerating in saying that you're by far the best gunsmithing channel I've found. Please keep up the great work. But don't let this swell up your head and make it hard to fit your hats :D
Mark, you Sir are one of the very few national treasures we have in this world. I could watch you're videos all day long.. I have few pre 1899 pistols I've picked up as projects. One needs a main spring. I just might give it a go after watching this film !!!.
Keep up the great work 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Cheers
🍻
The smile at the end tells it all, the man loves what he does. Thanks Mark.
Another quality episode every time I watch there is another thing learned. The knowledge this man has is incredible and it always shows and I’m grateful to watch a highly skilled professional at work. I like that it is no one sense down to earth learning. Mark once again thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience.
Nice trick splitting the fabrication into two parts Mark .While I've stocked many ML guns from both precarves and blanks ... the intricacies of the flint lock itself and it's tuning I've always farmed out. Thank you so much for showing this ! There just aren't many 'smiths who know how to repair this seemingly simple mechanism. A lot of machinists think they can do gunsmithing and a lot of modern gunsmiths think they can fix muzzleloaders .
The black powder stuff is definitely my favorite, thanks Mark.
Mark, your gunsmithing skills are incredible, but your teaching skills are phenomenal!
Mark I have truly enjoyed your demonstrations of repair as well as the humor with which you do it . thank you!
Very informative...I’ve made springs, and your explanations will help me next time...I temper my springs by putting them in a pan,covering them with oil, then setting the oil on fire..after it’s burned up, the spring needs cleaned and is ready...learned it from an old timer at friendship many years ago
This oil method works well, however I find that you can only achieve 1 possible hardness/draw result. I need to play with the temper/draw/thickness/shape to reverse engineer into the remanufactured part. Lots of correct ways to skin this cat..,..
@Mark, looking at 6:50 that's not the "cheater's way", that is the blacksmithing way! I do blacksmithing as a hobby and as soon as you took out the hacksaw I knew what you were going to do. Of course doing this on an anvil would be even easier as you could just fuller that notch using the edge of the anvil face, bend it over with a hammer blow, and then clean up the twist bit with a half face blow.
That’s what I thought!
Mark. You are a true craftsman. I enjoy your series. Thank you for doing this
As Always , thank you for the fantastic information, Mr .Novak ,I'm sprung with enthusiasm to attempt making one myself when the opportunity arises!
There’s so much to learn from this channel
Yes, but by a thousandfold
Love the lead pot temper idea it will save me a lot of mucking about.
This one was touch and go for me to watch; I cringe at how fast a pro works (and can talk at the same time), but the final product is perfection! Fantastic!
Thank you Mark. Hadnt thought about Tempering in lead. Makes good sense though.
You had my full attention and a new subscriber with the first minute and 25 seconds. Wowee cool skill set, knowledge, and arsenal of tools in that workshop you’ve got sir.
Just found your chanel by accident, and im glad i did. You have some great information and a great personality. Thanks brother!
mark , some of us out here .( are ) wanna- be gunsmiths....you give hope to the hopeless...you give faith to the faithless...you give odor to the odorless. ..........................................thanks, mark.
Makes me want to go out in the forge! Excellent work.
If I'm ever in your neck of the woods and need work done on any of my guns, I would absolutely bring it to you. Love your work.👍
Very nice episode mark, especially because you also discussed the heat treating. I'm professionally very involved with making temperature control systems for heat treatment (incl. PWHT post weld heat treatment) and really like that you showed this classic way of heat treating that we can also do in our home workshop!
Thanks. Trying to show the old school stuff, with some entertainment thrown in as we..
@@marknovak8255 yes, the entertainment value is very high, this one made me laugh hard a few times.
Amazing work, Mark!
Once again thank you Mark for letting us watch you while you work. I always learn so much from your videos. And also happy Veterans Day
Love the tell them what you are going to tell them intro, excellent!
Didn't know you could run temper in a lead pot great point of information MR Novak cool stroll down the rabbit hole stay safe
I learn so much from you Mark, Thank You!
Loved this episode Mark! That's really informative. I had no idea that you could float steel on molten lead. Thinking logically though it's a no brainier when you look at the density. Perhaps for upmarket gun springs you should temper in molten gold! lol
Marks work makes me happy
Great video. I have to make a v spring for a little hopkins and allen falling block and your video will help me greatly. John
My Nepalese Brunswick copy has a broken spring. I might have to give this a shot for a replacement. My Snider Enfield also had a broken spring, but replacements were available and that was an easy swap to get it back into action.
You are the man, mister...
Was watching C&Rsenal and was like what happened to Mark I missed your videos very entertaining as always glad I found ya
Fascinating craftsmanship.
The melting point of pure lead is a very precise temperature reference at 621.5F (327.5C). It can be used as a calibration check for high temperature thermometers. The freezing point of zinc is however better.
Some of the best content on youtube.
Thank you, thank you, thank you!!! I am a woodworker that has always envied you metal workers. I now have a new appreciation for the "magic" that you guys possess. And you explained it so well that even this German/Norwegian/American could understand
Superb tutorial. Springs are essential.
yes, as always, it's been a pleasure watching.
As a warning, cooling in oil isn't nessesarily slower... it will be on very small items like these springs, but for larger/hotter steel sections the evaporation causes the steel to be insulated from the water, while the vastly higher boiling point, lower expansion rate, and endothermic decomposition of oil will allow it to continue to extract a high degree of energy. For this reason the fairly soft temper of the large rolls of steel sold for automotive fabrication is actually attained by submerging the entire roll and letting it flash boil for over an hour... to attain higher hardnesses fan, or forced jet water sprayers are used. Its not something even a home shop should forget either, as the same practice that works for guns lock spring, will garner a fairly different result on a barrel, car's leaf spring, or a sword blade (even between a sword and an axe you'll require to experiment several times to dial it in... so make sure thats on scrap metal FIRST, not a customers job you've got 20 hours into).
Mark, your disclaimer at the beginning got me thinking. I will never possess the skill to refurbish, conserve or in any other way fiddle with firearms other than at a very basic level [giving a stock some love, cleaning stuff up and replacing minor broken things with ready made parts, etc.]. However, I have used the things you demonstrated to rust blue tools, bringing life back to beat up old wood furniture, and tinker around with various projects in my --jerry rigged propane stove-- forge. A deep thank you from --BFE-- --the frozen craphole of Hoth-- Northeast Ohio.
I grew up in Mentor. I get the frozen/snowbelt/salt and cinders vibe
@@marknovak8255 Pardon my french but holy shit, it's a small world! Southern Ashtabula county says hello!
OK, and I almost married a girl from Montville, a long time ago. AND........mic drop
@@marknovak8255 Okay.... I am afraid I don't understand your reply. I worry that I pissed you off in some way. Probably my low IQ showing itself. (Wouldn't be the first time I was guilty of being too stupid to understand something, or irritated someone by saying something moronic... my ex wife can vouch for that.) I hope I didn't offend you by being off topic or something. I was just floored that somebody I am a fan of grew up relatively nearby. Again, my apologies. Anyway, have a good evening.
Out standing,,,,I have learned so much from watching, and listening,,,
Thank you,,
You are correct and assuming that I am very average and that I have a lead pot. I also have a thermometer similar to yours so you have made tempering a lot more easy and precise for me I've seen the same thing used for assault bath bluing and various brass annealing, but it just didn't occur to me that I had the ability to precisely temper springs with tools I already had.
I've watched your videos in the past, but I subscribed last night. This vid is one of your best!
I can't understand why you didn't subscribe on watching your very first video whichever one it was, coz they're all brilliant. I no longer shoot or have anything to do with guns here in the UK as our laws are so draconian, but I used to both shoot and do my own gun smithing and I subscribed on my very first Anvil video.
Toaster oven is another good way to temper steel. Thanks for sharing your knowledge Mr Novak!
Many thanks Mark. Brilliant video.
The welding is new to me ,never accured to me is is only the bottom limb of the spring that does the work ,at 79 i hope I get
the chance to try it
Another great video Mark gave me the visuals to go along with what little theory I had heard about springs.
Thank you.
I had never considered how flintlocks work. Never shot one so I didn't appreciate what the cock has to do to function properly. Outstanding presentation, sir.
Great ending to an excellent Saturday!! Thank you Mark and crew!! Outstanding as usual.
Down the rabbit hole and thirty four minutes and change later I've been kicked out of wonderland again, but it was great while it lasted. Sir, I wonder if you shall ever lead us through the looking glass... ?
You know, I wreckon sometimes 'Just a Flash in the pan' can be a really good thing! Take Care and be safe, John
Wonderfull work Mark.
I learned so much on this episode, thanks.
I can’t even imagine the hours and frustrations expended to have the experience to get this right the first time, Mark.
Inspiring video.
Regards,
Marky
Can confirm, many springs died to give us that video
Very good information. Thanks for sharing Mark. 👍💪
I watched a video not too long ago on bow making... it's seems like a lot of the principles of making a bow and making a spring crossover.
Mark,
As always another great video.Thanks for the lesson.
Appreciate your talent and experience
Ive never handled a gun or done any serious machining or metalwork but I enjoying watching a true craftsman and appreciate the amount of work and skill involved in repairing a firearm like this. If I had another life I think id want to learn to be a maker of firearms. Im not saying I'd be any good though...lol
..always love watchin' this ,my friend...
Don't know if I'll ever use this knowledge, but thanks for teaching. You never know when you might need it 🤔
Amazing workmanship
Great video very informative thanks for walking us threw .
Came for the gunsmithing edu, stayed for the comedic relief.
Simply FASCINATING!
Mark you are a genius.
Was looking for watch mainsprings, but this`ll do ;)
I use car leaf spring steel to make new springs...... heat red and anneal, cut and file to shape and fit, heat to non-magnetic, quench in cool oil..... heat gently in a flame until the oil just flashes off, and its ready..... works well
I have a 1801 1795 Springfield pattern Eli Whitney contract musket issued to Maryland troops. It was converted to a percussion system for use in the Civil War. It is completely original other than a commercial hammer and the frizzen removed and reworked from a blacksmith's addition of a cone and drum.
The only part broken is the sear spring. At some time in the future I hope you could do a video on making a new one. Great instructional info.
Do you have the broken spring? You could well use it as a guide to make one or get a commercial one close enough to work
I almost can’t believe you get paid to mess around and fix those amazing “tools”. I understand in the end it’s a job and a daily grind, but hell, what a way to be able to make a living. I will never get to see, much less touch all those gems.
Genie of the lock. Outstanding
I hope we get Anvili 017 back one of these days, just because I want to listen to Mark's rant about people taunting the Buckingham Palace guards again. :)
Kinda STUPID to taunt an armed man on his watch station while guarding his queen. You mean that?
@@marknovak8255 That's the one. "OK, sidebar. What is wrong with these people?"
@@ZGryphon No shit.
I learn so much from you.... thanks!
I still can't get over "violla" XD
Great video. I use an oven to temper stuff, same principle but I like to soak for an hour then repeat two or three times. Knifemakers tend to be steel geeks
Thanks again....l see are in order....Thanks my friend...
A-good source of thin spring material is metal leaf rakes. The individual tines are really easily made over and take heat treatment really well. Many such rakes also have 3/16 to1/4” springs included as a stiffener on the back. I have never used them on guns but i have used them for antique engine repairs. Particularly in and around governors and carburetors.