I have been target shooting my 14-1 for the past two years and it has functioned flawlessly. I was able to obtain a full target hammer (the revolver came with a semi target hammer) from a very generous member of this forum and recently installed it. When dry firing the revolver it functioned as before the hammer switch, flawlessly.
On my first outing with the new target hammer installed, and after firing approximately 40 rounds in single action, I started to experience what I took to be "chicken finger". The trigger pull seemed to increase enormously and I thought the muscles in my finger were seizing up due to holding too long. When this continued to happen I knew it was the gun and not me.
When I pull on the trigger it feels bound up until a very strong pull finally gets the shot to break. I should say that when functioning normally the trigger pull is approximately 2 3/4 lbs. Another unusual occurrence is that occasionally, when cocking in single action, sear engagement will not take place - it's as if the trigger were being held all the way back and the cocking notch has nothing to engage with.
Both the old hammer and the replacement target hammer measure .265". The replacement hammer seems to track straight back and forth with no side play. In single action cock, and under magnification, the sear engagement looks square and consistent. The revolver is clean.
Can anyone offer a possible explanation for what's happening?
Thanks in advance - Bill
On my first outing with the new target hammer installed, and after firing approximately 40 rounds in single action, I started to experience what I took to be "chicken finger". The trigger pull seemed to increase enormously and I thought the muscles in my finger were seizing up due to holding too long. When this continued to happen I knew it was the gun and not me.
When I pull on the trigger it feels bound up until a very strong pull finally gets the shot to break. I should say that when functioning normally the trigger pull is approximately 2 3/4 lbs. Another unusual occurrence is that occasionally, when cocking in single action, sear engagement will not take place - it's as if the trigger were being held all the way back and the cocking notch has nothing to engage with.
Both the old hammer and the replacement target hammer measure .265". The replacement hammer seems to track straight back and forth with no side play. In single action cock, and under magnification, the sear engagement looks square and consistent. The revolver is clean.
Can anyone offer a possible explanation for what's happening?
Thanks in advance - Bill