And try to fix my creepy sks trigger.
Man that pin is a booger to get out, but I digress.
I polished the sear but it still has plenty of creep. Is the goal to actually take material off the sear? I am keeping the angle As is for now even though it does suffer slightly from negative engagement.
Send it off. He did two of mine and I couldn't be happier.
Quote from: Tank50 on July 10, 2016, 05:14:42 PM
Send it off. He did two of mine and I couldn't be happier.
I have no doubt, and it will save me some headache and guess work.
But in this stagnant economy I am willing to tackle this on my own. I'll do more research, thanks.
Basically yes... To reduce the amount of travel you keep the same angle on the face and reduce it back a tiny bit. This is very tricky because you do NOT want the hammer to fall when you pull the trigger with the safety on. Because of this gap between the trigger itself and the safety.... There will always be some creep.
Quote from: Loose}{Cannon on July 10, 2016, 08:26:20 PM
Basically yes... To reduce the amount of travel you keep the same angle on the face and reduce it back a tiny bit. This is very tricky because you do NOT want the hammer to fall when you pull the trigger with the safety on. Because of this gap between the trigger itself and the safety.... There will always be some creep.
Thank you, I got it to a point of acceptable creep but now trying to reach neutral engagement nirvana.
I achieved neutrality. I have to admit it feels pretty good. Pull to a wall, pull through, break.
I banged it, I shook it, I put it on safety and pulled on it, I beat it some more.
No accidental hammer drop.
If I ever get rid of it I can do so with a clear conscience.