How does glock trigger reset work




















Liability Disclaimer: The Reset Trigger System shall in no way be held liable for any incident whatsoever, nor any punitive, incidental, or consequential damages, resulting from the resale or use, misuse, or installation of the Reset Trigger System. No other statement, written or oral, by any representative or employee of the Reset Trigger System company shall supersede this disclaimer.

Trigger Reset for Glock This is unlike any other reset trigger kit on the market! If you decide to self-install the Reset Trigger System, please make note of the following safety considerations: Always double check that the firearm is unloaded and the magazine is removed.

If you want to use the reset trigger with iDryfire, you will also need a laser insert: Shop Now Conditions Of Use: Each Trigger Reset system is designed and intended for use only in the firearm specified on the back label. The nice thing about Glocks is there is a tactile and audio queue to let you know your finger has come far enough off the trigger to let it reset. Read on to understand how the trigger affects the shooting better. This is what you want to pay attention to.

As you fire the gun, press the trigger in, make sure your finger stays on the trigger until you hear and feel the reset. Then you can slowly press the trigger again until you feel the resistance and you fire again. Do this until you really get a feel for the trigger pull and how far forward you need to go for it to actually reset. What many people do, particularly those who have just started shooting, is once they pull the trigger and fire the gun they will take their finger completely off of it.

This means you now have a longer distance to press the trigger. This gives you a bigger chance for your sights to get out of alignment and produce much more sway, leading to shots that are all over the place. Work on that trigger press and prep. Practice at a very short range, like yards. Fire a round then slowly come off the trigger, and feel and hear the reset, then go again. Remember to always keep your finger on the trigger. It only ever comes off far enough to allow the trigger to reset.

It will only come off whenever you actually breakpoint and are no longer in a shooting position. No matter what size Glock you may be using, Glock 34, 19 or 26, the process is going to be the same even for the best Glock trigger.

The 3 parts most directly involved in the trigger reset are. The reason the trigger doesn't reset on a locked back slide is that the striker hook, which is part on the slide, doesn't. The trigger resets after firing when the nose of the trigger bar slips back down under the connector — then the trigger is ready to fire again. The distance the trigger must travel forward in order to reset is the relevant distance.

The angle of the 3. This difference is attributable to the respective angles of the two different connectors — the same angle that give them differing pull weights.

All things being equal, the 5 connector yields a shorter reset. The Glock trigger has some over-travel. If you shorten that over-travel, then you shorten the distance the trigger must move in order to reset. You can shorten the over-travel in several ways. One method is to use a over-travel stop of some kind. The easiest method is to buy a prepped housing from Charlie Vanek. You can also use the Ghost Rocket connector that has a over-travel stop built in. Start new topic. Recommended Posts.

Posted November 30, So what can be done to get a quicker reset? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options Posted December 1, Kimberkid Posted December 1, BR Posted December 1, Second, if you are running a lighter weight recoil spring, bump up the weight or go with stock.

Third, you can replace the heavier trigger-return [? Cheers, -brian reynolds.



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