ChrisKalan
Member
@Ibyte_40...welcome! The board is great because great people share thoughtful and well thought out ideas. Keep on sharing.
The Sigma rocks!
The Sigma rocks!
I went ahead and made some changes to my Sigma .40. Working one step at a time and test firing between steps I removed the pigtail spring and took 1/8" off the inner sear spring. I polished the sear until it looks like a mirror. I also polished the trigger connector bar where it bears on the frame, the sear holder and (very carefully) the sear ramp on the frame. Finally, I replaced the striker spring with the Wolff 3.5 pound spring. The trigger breaks at about 9 pounds as close as I can measure it and is smooth as silk. I've put 200 rounds through it with no FTF's or reset problems using Remington FMJ range ammo and have been able to increase the range where I can keep all my shots on a 9" plate from 10 yards out to 20 yards. If I work on my trigger and breath control I should be able to push that out to 25 yards. Over all, I'm thrilled with the way it came out.
Good observation DWinter... I was commenting on how sad it is that even though engineers aren't perfect, I am still not as smart as them-![]()
I did a 3', 5', and 10' drop test on oak hardwood floor with no padding and also on the concrete driveway with one mictrofiber towel as padding. I also did 3' to 4' waiste high flip and throw test into bare dirt and grass. I mag was in the pistol loaded, NONE CHAMBERED!!!! It never had a strike. Trigger and striker held firm. The polish on the pistol got beat up a tad, but nothing I can't polish out.![]()
Blastfact, you really should quit abusing your Sigma like that. If you'll take a minute to study the safety mechanisms built into your Sigma, you'd realize there is absolutely no way the firing pin can contact the primer unless the trigger is pulled. The firing pin safety is twofold and some. The firing pin cannot go forward enough to hit the primer, unless a bunch of things happen in unison. First, the trigger has to be pulled properly releasing the trigger safety, then the trigger bar has to depress the firing pin safety plunger on the slide, then the sear has to release. Unless all of those occur in order, the firing pin cannot move forward. Additionally, S&W beats Glock by adding another spring on the firing pin that positively locks the firing pin in the rearward position, until the sear breaks. IMHO, you could hit the muzzel end of a cocked and loaded Sigma in a vise with a sledge hammer and never get it to fire, so I think you're beating up your poor Sigma for nothing. S&W designed the Sigma with one of the best passive safety systems I've ever seen. If Plaxico had been carrying a Sigma, he'd still be catching balls in the NFL. Unmodified Sigmas wouldn't have experienced a problem like that. I believe the Sigmas are about the safest passive safety guns made. Save the wear and tear, stick with trigger improvements. The rest of the gun is more than competent.The only other plastic gun safety that I think might be slightly better is the SA-XD series and their safety system might be a little overbuilt, although quite impressive in action. They're backstrap safety system locks the whole gun up until engaged, slide and all. I like their system, but I can also see where some might have problems losing that much control. Kinda like the mag safety systems some folks hate.