CommanderCrusty
Member
I have a striker fired M&P 45 and I'm just not sure how to manage the trigger pull.
To me, all the striker fired guns feel like two stage military triggers: some light, gritty take up, followed by a stiff, single action pull with a lot of creep. XD, SR9, Glock all feel this way to me. So, I shoot them like singe actions with a two stage pull. Take up the slack, apply initial pull, roll back the trigger. But even with a Burwell trigger job, I feel like the trigger action is "too complicated."
Can you shoot a striker fired gun with more of a "one movement" feeling?
Is there a way to think of it and make my trigger finger movement more revolver-like?
I noticed in a Rob Letham video that he shoots his 1911 in a way that looks like one, continuous pull. So, even though he's shooting a true single action. When he did it, it didn't look like a two step process.
I'm not sure if I am explaining this very well, but if you know what I mean and can educate me on how to handle the M&P trigger, I would appreciate it. Thanks.
To me, all the striker fired guns feel like two stage military triggers: some light, gritty take up, followed by a stiff, single action pull with a lot of creep. XD, SR9, Glock all feel this way to me. So, I shoot them like singe actions with a two stage pull. Take up the slack, apply initial pull, roll back the trigger. But even with a Burwell trigger job, I feel like the trigger action is "too complicated."
Can you shoot a striker fired gun with more of a "one movement" feeling?
Is there a way to think of it and make my trigger finger movement more revolver-like?
I noticed in a Rob Letham video that he shoots his 1911 in a way that looks like one, continuous pull. So, even though he's shooting a true single action. When he did it, it didn't look like a two step process.
I'm not sure if I am explaining this very well, but if you know what I mean and can educate me on how to handle the M&P trigger, I would appreciate it. Thanks.