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The Range
Rifle & Shotgun Discussion
Question about ar15 trigger and springs..
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<blockquote data-quote="uncle money bags" data-source="post: 2207912" data-attributes="member: 8377"><p>If getting rid of the gritty feel is all you are after then you need to address the sear surfaces, not springs.</p><p>If you are a little technically proficient, and have the right tools/materials as well as an understanding with how you can overdo a polish job and ruin the surface hardening on your hammer and trigger then the cheapest way is a polish job.</p><p>If you are not wanting to tackle it, then an ALG fcg is an excellent choice.</p><p>Or, you can put a few hundred to thousand rounds down range and let the system wear itself in.</p><p></p><p>I have done all of the above except buy an ALG, and they work. I have also ruined a fcg by over polishing. In the end i went with a Geissele SSA and never regretted it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="uncle money bags, post: 2207912, member: 8377"] If getting rid of the gritty feel is all you are after then you need to address the sear surfaces, not springs. If you are a little technically proficient, and have the right tools/materials as well as an understanding with how you can overdo a polish job and ruin the surface hardening on your hammer and trigger then the cheapest way is a polish job. If you are not wanting to tackle it, then an ALG fcg is an excellent choice. Or, you can put a few hundred to thousand rounds down range and let the system wear itself in. I have done all of the above except buy an ALG, and they work. I have also ruined a fcg by over polishing. In the end i went with a Geissele SSA and never regretted it. [/QUOTE]
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