I was perusing another topic herein pertaining to "trigger jobs". I didn't want to appear to be hijacking the originator's topic, but I had a similar question, and tho't it best to ask it outside of his.
I've fired a 460V (but not mine – mine's never been fired, other than the factory test shots), and I found the 460V rounds to be brutal. However, the .45 Colt rounds were quite manageable – the heavy gun with the light (comparatively speaking) loads were comparable to a .38 revolver that I was allowed to test-fire. I've dry-fired my gun many times. The single-action pull is light, but the double-action pull is anything but. I read in the other topic a comment, from W R Moore, something to the effect of having the single-action notch on the hammer removed. He also recommended that such a modification be performed by Smith & Wesson, rather than an independent gunsmith (for liability concerns).
I have a 460V magnum revolver, 5" barrel with the shorter compensator in place. I don't know what single-action, or the double-action, pulls should be in weight. I'm now considering having the single-action feature removed, and the remaining action (double-action) set at something in between the original single-action and double-action pull weights.
QUESTION – is that feasible/reasonable, and if so – is it a good idea??? Any and all constructive suggestions/comments are appreciated, and Thank You in advance to those who choose to participate in this.
I've fired a 460V (but not mine – mine's never been fired, other than the factory test shots), and I found the 460V rounds to be brutal. However, the .45 Colt rounds were quite manageable – the heavy gun with the light (comparatively speaking) loads were comparable to a .38 revolver that I was allowed to test-fire. I've dry-fired my gun many times. The single-action pull is light, but the double-action pull is anything but. I read in the other topic a comment, from W R Moore, something to the effect of having the single-action notch on the hammer removed. He also recommended that such a modification be performed by Smith & Wesson, rather than an independent gunsmith (for liability concerns).
I have a 460V magnum revolver, 5" barrel with the shorter compensator in place. I don't know what single-action, or the double-action, pulls should be in weight. I'm now considering having the single-action feature removed, and the remaining action (double-action) set at something in between the original single-action and double-action pull weights.
QUESTION – is that feasible/reasonable, and if so – is it a good idea??? Any and all constructive suggestions/comments are appreciated, and Thank You in advance to those who choose to participate in this.
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