When I was about 22 I made a rubber trigger stop for my Taurus. Most time I fired it in double action but single action was not impossible, just a bit heavy. I did an internal rubber trigger stop but decided to keep it outside just to able to remove it in case of problems. Since Taurus uses a different trigger this idea is not possible on Taurus but it's the most clever solution I saw for S&W based designs, very good idea.
@@unclehangfire Gotcha. I mostly shoot precision 27 yards offhand and still got a couple of 50p with mine. Did some polishing and a lighter reboundspring. Main spring I leave as is. Shortened barrel to 5" cause of a shootingbulge from previous owner. Only shoot handloads :)
Well someone took those POWER CUSTOM washers to heart, I can see to center the hammer but I think unless the trigger was scuffing the frame the ones for the trigger might be an over kill.
Keep working that trigger like you doing and sooner/later that pin that the hammer is setting on is going to "ah sh!t" break off then you gotta send your Smitty back to the factory.
100% it also has zero affect on the action. As an added bonus an aggressive DA could use your “tampering with a safety device” to paint a bad picture of you.
@@sparky_-mf2cs When firearms come from the factory 99.9% of the time they are timed, calibrated, fitted, assembled, and ready for safe use by the consumer. These dremel weilding, screwdriver gouging "gun experts" simply want to come off as junior Brownings or Stoners, compared to true certified, educated, and experienced gunsmiths. Most manufacturers will not honor warranties that have been breached by these guys, when the gun surprisingly doesn't function as well after alteration. They even warn against disassembly beyond a certain point, unless handled by a real, living, breathing gunsmith. They do that for a reason. Never do they suggest removing or modifying original, nor adding jury rigged components to the internal workings of the gun.
No. This gun is running now and I am not reinventing the wheel here. Brass is not going to "degrade" under tens of pounds. Smith used this type of stop long before this video. Don't use the idea if you don't like it.