Vektor CP1.
I must have gotten lucky. Mine had a decent (for a box stock combloc military rifle) trigger. It was good enough to win a carbine match at the old NASA Lewis rifle range.No trigger I've tried has matched an out of the box Norinco SKS. I have two purchased brand new in the 90s. Both triggers were ridiculously long, creepy and gritty. Later I took the sear and stoned it until it took about half the amount of travel to release the hammer and smoothed it in the process. They are not match grade but drastically better as a result.
The same thing is easy with Glocks and S&W M&Ps. I did the "$0.25 trigger job" on and installed 3.5lb. Ghost connectors in my Glock 19 and Glock 22. They have excellent triggers now.Aside from used guns that simply didn't work at all - literally THE WORST trigger possible - I'd have to say the SD9VE.
It made those craptackular Glock triggers feel like a 1911.
So, in getting it ready for the next guy - I found a great utoob vid about tweaking the existing trigger rather than throw new parts at it.
20 minutes later and what was to date the single most perfect ergonomic pistol for me also had a better than average trigger that kept getting better.
Todd.
PA-63. Double action pull was over 60lb. Not especially smooth either. That's not an exaggeration. Kel Tec P11 is up there too, although 1/10 the pull. Its not only that its very long, and very heavy, but that theres a distince stop before it fires, making people think its broken.
Worst was a Cobra Derringer, but the P38 was a close second.Surprised no none got to this one yet ---
You haven't lived till you try to shoot a WWII P.38 in double action. I just figure that the first round is a throw away necessary to get the pistol cycled.
And just for contrast , the Beretta 85 , a firearm of rather similar design , is a shining example of how reasonable a sa/da pistol trigger can be in double action.