LMAO“General, you need to cancel the requisition for those fancy triggers you extensively tested and consequently ordered.”
“You see Sir, all we have to do is issue the privates a polishing dremel kit and some springs, and show them some youtubes .”
“Trust me Sir, we can save enough money for that new golf course you wanted. And the trigger will be just as good. The internet said so...”
GROUP BUY !!
If people here get together for a group buy,I suspect that jj can turn these screws out for about two bucks each. He would most likely install them and guarantee them also.
Who wants one ?? --- SAWMAN
Reducing the power of the hammer spring is alright for a range toy or target gun. If the gun is meant for saving one's life I want mil spec springs in the gun.All I am saying is this: the set screw reduces the take-up / pre-travel of the trigger. The adjustment is minor but it works, if your trigger has a lot of take up then you will like the change. Changing to reduced power springs (like JD Power 3.0-3.5 lb,) will reduce pull weight of course. SO using this setup on a Mil-spec trigger will work IF the stock trigger is descent to begin with. Like I said my Sig M400 had a horrible stock trigger so I changed it and the springs and used the set screw and I love the setup now. However I have " set-screwed" and changed springs on other brands (Smith & Wesson, Colt, and PSA) that had better Mil-spec triggers to start with and the owners are very happy with the changes and the guns function fine. To each his own, spend whatever you need to get the results you want, or don't. The thread started by asking if anyone had tried this setup or not. Well some have and they didn't get the results they wanted but my experience was positive. Again I wasn't expecting some magical transformation just making what I had to work with a little better, sometimes it made it a lot better.