Posted: 7/19/2016 8:33:26 PM EDT
| Looking for a trigger for my edc. Just curious what everyone is using. I'm looking at the Haley strategic right now. Anyone in the stl area selling? |
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Quoted:
Looking for a trigger for my edc. Just curious what everyone is using. I'm looking at the Haley strategic right now. Anyone in the stl area selling? Stock Glock NY8 in mine.. I actually PUT that trigger in there... Or Rather E1CM did... At my request... Glocks need a couple things REAL sights (Night Sights not plastic) and a light... Most of the rest is fine as is, I did put a G34 Mag Catch on mine it is longer (I think that was the model) Past that I am good.... |
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I put all stock OE FCG parts back in mine. Lots of dry fire smoothed them out a bit. I can hit what I'm aiming at and they are still OE reliable.
But I do like my aftermarket sights, Heinie, Trijicon, TruGlo, and Meprolights, all tritium infused and of the 3-dot style, with a preference for the Heinies. However I was VERY disappointed when Heinie chose to discontinue offering 3-dot night sights in favor of their "Straight 8" arrangement. |
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Glockkraft trigger is the best trigger IMO, there was a few of us in the Glock sub-forum that did a lot of testing with aftermarket Glock triggers. Glockkraft came out on top a majority of the time.
Here's the link to thread if you want to be entertained http://www.ar15.com/forums/t_5_13/160921_Battle_of_the_Flat_Triggers__Agency_Arms_and_Suarez_Intl___Now_with_more_Deus_Ex_Machina_.html |
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Resisted Glock as long as possible. Pure 1911, CZ fan.
Caved on the inexpensive Gen 2 G19 LE trade in. Yuck NY trigger spring from the 1911 perspective. New springs, a meticulous polishing, and cleaning. Immediately bought another Gen 2 G19. Lather, rinse, repeat for the trigger. Love the Glock G19's. Not 1911 or CZ quality but damned easy to operate and boring (but reassuring) reliability. The myth and rumors are true. Try new springs and polishing friction points before a trigger replacement unless you just want to spend the money. I think, from my experience, you'd have to severely damage or nearly destroy all the original OEM internal components before you'd have to consider an entire trigger replacement. DISCLAIMER I don't shoot in competition or train relentlessly, shooting multi-thousands of rounds per year. |
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I've got the 4 1/2 lb connector in both my CCW Glocks (one is LWD, one is Glock, I can't tell the difference) with the NY8 trigger return spring. The trigger pull is smoother and more consistent, and the NY return spring is less likely to break than the stock return spring.
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Quoted:
Resisted Glock as long as possible. Pure 1911, CZ fan. Caved on the inexpensive Gen 2 G19 LE trade in. Yuck NY trigger spring from the 1911 perspective. New springs, a meticulous polishing, and cleaning. Immediately bought another Gen 2 G19. Lather, rinse, repeat for the trigger. Love the Glock G19's. Not 1911 or CZ quality but damned easy to operate and boring (but reassuring) reliability. The myth and rumors are true. Try new springs and polishing friction points before a trigger replacement unless you just want to spend the money. I think, from my experience, you'd have to severely damage or nearly destroy all the original OEM internal components before you'd have to consider an entire trigger replacement. DISCLAIMER I don't shoot in competition or train relentlessly, shooting multi-thousands of rounds per year. ^^^^^ This has been my experience after buying an after market trigger. |