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Glock Trigger Breaking!!!!

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Key information in this thead, in my opinion, supplied by JoeD. In addition to just deburring, drilling the hole out a little, then deburring, would probably eliminate, or at least mitigate, the broken trigger spring problem.

I'd rather take my chances with a broken spring than use a NY spring.
 
I'm new to Glocks and dont understand what a New York trigger is and what is bad about it?

You will find the slide doesn't come off the same.

How would it come off then?


I have a G26 that I bought last summer for CCW and like it a lot. However the trigger pull feels a little light to me.

I have been thinking about night sites for it and one of those plugs for that opening at the bottom by the mag well as well as a finger extension for the mag.

Any other suggestions for tuneing it up would be appreciated.
 
If the 5 lb. connector is too light put an 8 lb. connector in. The finger extension is a must for the small frame Glocks.
I had a customer recently that wanted a Glock trigger pull to be as close to the feel of a 1911 pull as possible. I installed one of my Ultra Comp. trigger bars along with an 8 lb connector. Result was a very short, crisp 3 lb. pull.
 
After many thousands of rounds thru a G23 two springs have broken, a slide lock spring and a slide stop spring. No problem with the trigger spring.
 
The finger extension is a must for the small frame Glocks.

Disagree. Then why purchase a subcompact 26/27/33 when you can go with a compact model instead?

The only glocks I like are the subcompacts without the finger extension that's a lot of firepower in a such a small package. Adding a finger extension defeats the purpose in my opinion.
 
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