I don't think I'm transgressing the 'No Whining' rule--slap me if I am--but I am going to whine a bit. Bear with me.
I was seriously excited to pick up a new 686+ with a 3" barrel today (although not a fan of the trigger lock). My local, non-big-box, family owned, sporting goods store had one on sale today. I had wandered in for something else, but the sale caught my eye, and one hing led to another. You know how that goes.
I really liked this 686+. The balance and feel of the 3" barrel was excellent. The trigger seemed remarkably good. While the 686+ may be a bit bulky, I think it could be a carry pistol for me. I'm a wee bit short on ready cash right now, but that trigger felt really nice and it is in my favorite flavor and stainless will last forever and...yeah, I rationalized my way into a purchase. Joy.
Naturally I was off to the range as soon as I could get away. I loaded the 686+ with HPR 158 FMJ (because that's the factory stuff I had on hand) and proceeded to check the sights. Bang, bang, ***click***, uh....what's going on here?, ***click***, bang. Yes, it looked like light primer strikes. I fired a few more rounds and had a light primer strike every 4-5 rounds.
I switched to handloads. Winchester components. Again, light primer strikes with a failure every 5-6 rounds. I switched to another set of handloads, Starline brass + CCI primers + Berry plated 158's. Same thing, failure to fire, every 5-6 rounds.
The primers told the tale: light strikes.
So I hustled back to the LGS and got to talk with the gunsmith. He was baffled. He measured all the things he could, he compared my new 686+ to another one, he dry fired it, he cycled it with spent cases, he did everything he could. At the end of his earnest inspection, he thought the strain screw may have been a bit short and the trigger pull was light at around 10.5#.
So he replaced the screw and now the trigger is 12#. It feels more like 12#. When I decided to buy this particular pistol, I think it was because the trigger felt so good. I know 1.5# is not a big deal, but it just doesn't feel the same at 12#. And I was already shooting a little low-left.
I'm going back to the range tomorrow with some Winchester white box and some more handloads. Hopefully we're firing on all cylinders, as they say. But it's not the same pistol I fell in love with this morning: my confidence is shaken and the trigger feels...heavy.
I was seriously excited to pick up a new 686+ with a 3" barrel today (although not a fan of the trigger lock). My local, non-big-box, family owned, sporting goods store had one on sale today. I had wandered in for something else, but the sale caught my eye, and one hing led to another. You know how that goes.
I really liked this 686+. The balance and feel of the 3" barrel was excellent. The trigger seemed remarkably good. While the 686+ may be a bit bulky, I think it could be a carry pistol for me. I'm a wee bit short on ready cash right now, but that trigger felt really nice and it is in my favorite flavor and stainless will last forever and...yeah, I rationalized my way into a purchase. Joy.
Naturally I was off to the range as soon as I could get away. I loaded the 686+ with HPR 158 FMJ (because that's the factory stuff I had on hand) and proceeded to check the sights. Bang, bang, ***click***, uh....what's going on here?, ***click***, bang. Yes, it looked like light primer strikes. I fired a few more rounds and had a light primer strike every 4-5 rounds.
I switched to handloads. Winchester components. Again, light primer strikes with a failure every 5-6 rounds. I switched to another set of handloads, Starline brass + CCI primers + Berry plated 158's. Same thing, failure to fire, every 5-6 rounds.
The primers told the tale: light strikes.
So I hustled back to the LGS and got to talk with the gunsmith. He was baffled. He measured all the things he could, he compared my new 686+ to another one, he dry fired it, he cycled it with spent cases, he did everything he could. At the end of his earnest inspection, he thought the strain screw may have been a bit short and the trigger pull was light at around 10.5#.
So he replaced the screw and now the trigger is 12#. It feels more like 12#. When I decided to buy this particular pistol, I think it was because the trigger felt so good. I know 1.5# is not a big deal, but it just doesn't feel the same at 12#. And I was already shooting a little low-left.
I'm going back to the range tomorrow with some Winchester white box and some more handloads. Hopefully we're firing on all cylinders, as they say. But it's not the same pistol I fell in love with this morning: my confidence is shaken and the trigger feels...heavy.