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The Range
Rifle & Shotgun Discussion
AR trigger work
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<blockquote data-quote="ez bake" data-source="post: 1277984" data-attributes="member: 229"><p>A word of caution when doing home-trigger jobs (or even when having a smith to the work if he/she doesn't know AR triggers really <u>really</u> well).</p><p></p><p>The problem with AR triggers is that they're not all equal. I'm not trying to start another "mine is better than yours" argument, but several LPK manufacturers don't use the same quality materials, hardening process, or tolerances when manufacturing the individual parts (specifically of concern is the fire control group).</p><p></p><p>Taking a little material off might create a great-feeling trigger, but with heavy use comes wear and tear on the parts and that great-feeling trigger might start to get longer, mis-timed, become full-auto, or worst-case, let the hammer fall before the bolt closes.</p><p></p><p>Lots of stories on the net of AR triggers failing (once messed with), so just be careful out there.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ez bake, post: 1277984, member: 229"] A word of caution when doing home-trigger jobs (or even when having a smith to the work if he/she doesn't know AR triggers really [U]really[/U] well). The problem with AR triggers is that they're not all equal. I'm not trying to start another "mine is better than yours" argument, but several LPK manufacturers don't use the same quality materials, hardening process, or tolerances when manufacturing the individual parts (specifically of concern is the fire control group). Taking a little material off might create a great-feeling trigger, but with heavy use comes wear and tear on the parts and that great-feeling trigger might start to get longer, mis-timed, become full-auto, or worst-case, let the hammer fall before the bolt closes. Lots of stories on the net of AR triggers failing (once messed with), so just be careful out there. [/QUOTE]
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