I did a custom trigger job on my Shield. I ground down the trigger bar ramp on the sear. I need a stock sear to keep incase i have to return it for warrentee purposes. Does anybody know where to get one?? The only way i found one, is included in a sear block and all websites are backordered.
Thanks for the help.
You may want to not be removing ANY material from the sear engagement to make a "custom trigger job."
Doing so GREATLY increases the likelihood that the engagement will not stay engaged, which will result in the pistol "decocking" itself (remember, the S&W M&P, like the Glock, has a pre-loaded striker that is very near the full cock point). Actually, the S&W M&P is nearly fully cocked, while the Glock system is partially pre-cocked. Thus, the M&P trigger action merely trips the sear allowing the firing pin to fly forward. On the other hand, pulling the trigger on the Glock finishes the cocking of the striker and then releases or trips the sear allowing the firing pin to fly forward. In both designs, pulling the trigger deactivates the automatic internal mechanisms firing pin and drop safeties.
Decocking because you remove too much material, thereby allowing the sear engagement to trip the sear and allow the firing pin to fly forward on its own without pulling the trigger is safe, in theory, but only if the firing pin safety is working properly.
Naturally, if it decocks itself in such manner, then it will not fire until you rack the slide again. This is a disastrous result in a self-defense situation.
It is possibly dangerous and at the very least embarrassing if it decocks itself due to a bad "trigger job" and the firing pin safety does not work as it should. To paraphrase, the famous Mae West quote, "Was that a firecracker in your pocket, or are you just happy to see me?"
The Glock armorer's course and manual warns of this and they have a specific specification for the minimum engagement between the sear and the striker.
As the pistol in question is not a "target pistol" in the sense of four minute of angle accuracy like a bullseye pistol (two inch groups at 54 yards (50 meters), the minor little advantage you get from a "trigger job" on such pistols is greatly outweighed by the dangerous situation created if you remove material from the engagement surface. I would strongly encourage you to restore the pistol back to factory original specs.