trackskippy
Member
- Joined
- Oct 2, 2010
- Messages
- 3,605
That seems pretty common with a lot of things. Especially the guns with a lot of aftermarket going on.
I want a stock Glock 19 MOS with SRO! plain and simple
I may have been unclear in the OP. It is the single action pull of the Smith revolvers that I like so much; that "breaking glass" feel. I can do without a twelve pound SA pull!
You know what I've had to do to my Colt 1911 Government model.......oil it.Yeah I have noticed that too. First thing people do when they get a glock is start replacing stuff.
Thats all you should have to do with any of them. All the aftermarket accessory makers, and a LOT of people on internet gun boards, seem to say otherwise.You know what I've had to do to my Colt 1911 Government model.......oil it.
Okay, so I'm a revolver man, but I finally decided to join the 21st century with regard to my carry gun. I was going to switch to a 1911, but there is a high quality training center just a few miles down the road which uses Glocks - converted to lasers and C02 - exclusively, so here I am with my first Glock.
And I get it, for the most part. It's a well-made and well thought out gun, and I'm impressed.
The trigger, though, is just awful, especially for a guy brought up on the utter perfection of old S&W revolvers.
Is there anything that can be done for the Glock trigger, while remaining safe and appropriate for an EDC gun?
I may have been unclear in the OP. It is the single action pull of the Smith revolvers that I like so much. .
I think this may be the universe telling you that you were supposed to be training with the double-action pull all those years. Glocks are unalterably double action.
My suggestion - shoot it in its stock configuration for a while (like 1000 rounds) and reassess.
Looks like there are are pins, linkages, and sliding surfaces. I don't see how a Glock can be made to have as good a trigger as the single stage on a revolver.
Trouble is for me, the voice in the back of my head cannot safely wrap itself around the safety systems built into the trigger so these are great range guns for me.
ok… I’ll take a 8” wafer in the 6nm wavelengthMark_Mark, could you help me out? Do you want a Glock Metal Oxide Semiconductor with Standing Room Only? And if so, why?
(I have fallen behind on gun jargon and acronyms, sorry.)
It is a trade off of a crisp release when you have to shoot the gun versus when you are not planning to engage the gun.And why crisp, light SA trigger pulls were not a consideration.
They are better than many DA trigger pulls found in other “no other manual saftey” firearms.
It's a point lost in almost all trigger discussions. Practice and familiarity is what makes a good trigger.I’d just like to point out a trigger doesn’t have to be light to be good, that’s a point many here seem to be overlooking.