lantern2814
New member
My wife decided that the Ruger lc9s was the gun that was small enough in 9mm that she liked the feel and looks of over all the other sub compact offerings. So, I bought one for her and over the last few weeks we've hit the range and she still loves it. Not one word about the trigger.
Well, I HAVEN'T been shooting her gun on our trips as I wanted her to get as much time with it as possible while I worked on my own guns.
Yesterday I went alone and since she wasn't using that one I took the Ruger with me. Here's the question. Is the striker supposed to just surprise you the way this one does? Meaning there's no real stop and then break of the shot during the trigger stroke. The stroke itself is fairly smooth, but there's just a easy take up then creeeeeeeeep BANG about 85% into the pull. For the life of me I couldn't get used to it.
Now, what I COULD do is hold the gun steady and pull the trigger as if I were firing a DA gun and got pretty good results with it. If the gun is supposed to break in the way that I've described then this is the best way I've found to be accurate. It makes sense that my wife hasn't mentioned it since she usually shoots as if she's firing a DA trigger no matter what she's shooting. Got a little bit of Rob Leatham in her style. LOL
In short(or not so short). Is this how the trigger usually is on the LC9s? Not really a problem, unless it's SUPPOSED to have a solid stop and then break.
Well, I HAVEN'T been shooting her gun on our trips as I wanted her to get as much time with it as possible while I worked on my own guns.
Yesterday I went alone and since she wasn't using that one I took the Ruger with me. Here's the question. Is the striker supposed to just surprise you the way this one does? Meaning there's no real stop and then break of the shot during the trigger stroke. The stroke itself is fairly smooth, but there's just a easy take up then creeeeeeeeep BANG about 85% into the pull. For the life of me I couldn't get used to it.
Now, what I COULD do is hold the gun steady and pull the trigger as if I were firing a DA gun and got pretty good results with it. If the gun is supposed to break in the way that I've described then this is the best way I've found to be accurate. It makes sense that my wife hasn't mentioned it since she usually shoots as if she's firing a DA trigger no matter what she's shooting. Got a little bit of Rob Leatham in her style. LOL
In short(or not so short). Is this how the trigger usually is on the LC9s? Not really a problem, unless it's SUPPOSED to have a solid stop and then break.
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