Walt Sherrill
Member
Those springs?
Try something lighter than the factory hammer spring. Wolff will have a variety available.
www.gunsprings.com
20lbs. is considered factory spec for the 9mm, and they have 15,16,17,18,and 19 lb. springs, plus some higher.
Don't go too far below the recommended factory weight. I'd order a 17 lb. spring and a 16lb. and try the lightest first. A 15lb spring would lighten the trigger considerably, but may not have enough force to ignite all primers.
Try it with your regular ammo, and anything else you might use -- or, if it's primarily a range gun (not used for carry or home defense), just shoot it and keep the original spring for replacement if it doesn't work right.
Getting the old spring out takes three hands. There's a little tab on the bottom of the mag break that complicates things. (Check the parts diagram in the manual.) I simply take that tab off (break it off with pliers.) The mag break will still work perfectly, and it makes getting the main spring out and back in much easier.
.
Try something lighter than the factory hammer spring. Wolff will have a variety available.
www.gunsprings.com
20lbs. is considered factory spec for the 9mm, and they have 15,16,17,18,and 19 lb. springs, plus some higher.
Don't go too far below the recommended factory weight. I'd order a 17 lb. spring and a 16lb. and try the lightest first. A 15lb spring would lighten the trigger considerably, but may not have enough force to ignite all primers.
Try it with your regular ammo, and anything else you might use -- or, if it's primarily a range gun (not used for carry or home defense), just shoot it and keep the original spring for replacement if it doesn't work right.
Getting the old spring out takes three hands. There's a little tab on the bottom of the mag break that complicates things. (Check the parts diagram in the manual.) I simply take that tab off (break it off with pliers.) The mag break will still work perfectly, and it makes getting the main spring out and back in much easier.
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