cmort666
Member
With the right trigger, you can shoot a Glock 17 or Glock 22 in the centerfire stage of an NRA 2700 and do REASONABLY well, once you learn the trigger.The fact that you are comparing DA revolver and glock triggers shows that you really don't know what you are talking about
A DA trigger has a long trigger pull leading to a smooth pull, striker guns have a very short trigger when the weight is heavy it leads to more of a jerk...that's just the nature of it...it can be managed but falls apart outside of quasi shooting quals on stationary paper targets with time limits that really aren't
I am no fan of striker guns especially for novices but a heavy pull as a safety feature is ridiculous...it's a hardware fix to a software problem
The odds of you doing it with an "NY trigger"? Slim to none.
A lot of the special pleading about how neither the shooter nor the firearm need to be particularly accurate (nor indeed SAFE) is really just excuse making.
It's akin to the anti-gunners' claims that nobody should own a "sniper rifle" with a scope because it's "TOO accurate", or that practicing with your firearm "TOO much" means you're "planning to kill somebody".
As with most things, poor planning => low standards => poor performance.
Where things diverge of course is if you're a lousy insurance salesman, you get fired and get another job. If you're a citizen (without qualified immunity) and a lousy shot, the wrong person dies, and you live under a bridge... if you're lucky.