09jisaac
Regular Member
trolololololol
They're never going to let you by until you get another Taurus.
trolololololol
They're never going to let you by until you get another Taurus.
I cannot. I've touched that stove one too many times...and it's hot.
You havent even existed long enough to have touched anything too many times, yet.
I had to view the image URL, I just knew you made this yourself when I saw it lol.
You havent even existed long enough to have touched anything too many times, yet.
My issue is SIMILAR to this guys issue with this sig290. His hammer falls to the neutral position when staging the DA trigger ONLY when he does it slowly, as I was doing with mine.
I bet this is what's going on: the P229 like all modern firearms has a firing pin block, which is deactivated at the end of the trigger travel. Its job is to disallow the gun to fire, unless the trigger is pulled.
For some reason, the mechanics of your particular pistol allow the hammer to fall before the firing pin block is fully out of the way. This shouldn't happen, no matter how slowly you stage the trigger. It could be that the contact surfaces for the firing pin block are ever so slightly smaller than they should be, so it doesn't fully disengage when you operate the trigger so slowly.
The hammer on a Sig always rebounds to the neutral position after it contacts the firing pin, because when the trigger is released in double action mode, the hammer is caught by a safety notch in the sear which won't let the hammer move, even if the gun is dropped right on the hammer. It's probable that the hammer is hitting, but the firing pin block is taking the blow, and hammer is rebounding to its default state faster than your eyes can see.
thanks for the words joe.