A good friend of mine just picked up an XDS 3.3 in 9. right out of the box it shot better than my shield does (with over a 1,000 rounds through it and a reworked trigger).
The only gun that I've had with worse trigger than the shield is the XDS, what a horrible thing mushy, spongy, awful trigger, had a 45, and 9mm both 3.3 most people installed the PRP spring kit on it. I even sent mine to XDman to get it fixed.
My only complain with the shield9 was the grittiness and heavy pull, but apex took care of that. My shield 45 is nothing like the 9mm, it is nice clean and crisp, I guess S&W listened.
Hmmmm surprised to hear that about the XDS you shot, i was quite surprised by his, it wasn't as good as my XDM trigger but was not even close to the horrid mass trigger my shield came with.
Im curious about this too.The trigger bar loop gap from the factory was .024", which left the trigger break and reset out a bit farther than necessary even with the Apex sear. I took the gap down to .016", which still left about .110" of overtravel measured rear of the trigger at the top (held punches behind the trigger).
Strong first post! Curious for more info on the trigger bar loop to reduce overtravel. By gap, are you talking about the loop to the sear when trigger is not depressed? Did you reshape the trigger bar loop?
I'm talking about the gap measured with a feeler gauge at the end of the loop on the trigger bar that engages the nub on the sear. I used smooth jaw pliers to close it slightly.
Closing the loop moves the trigger break rearward. So, in effect, with a stock trigger you have less overtravel but more takeup. If the loop is closed too far, the trigger will stop before the sear releases. If open too far, the sear can release before the trigger bar is rearward enough to fully deactivate the striker block.
There is a Youtube video by Apex showing how to adjust the loop. They recommend small increments. Trigger Bar Loop Adjustment - YouTube
Just installed the sear on my standard Shield 9 and have a PC to compare.The trigger bar loop gap from the factory was .024", which left the trigger break and reset out a bit farther than necessary even with the Apex sear. I took the gap down to .016", which still left about .110" of overtravel measured rear of the trigger at the top (held punches behind the trigger). I wouldn't want it in much closer, and the existing amount of overtravel is tolerable.
I used an M&P Pro factory sear in my Shield and the trigger is very nice. The Pro sear is the same as a Performance Center sear. S&W adds a heavier sear spring under it to bring weight up a little. A lot of people set up their Pros for competition and install Apex sears, so there are a lot of new take out sears to be found. I tried an Apex 063 and it was very nice but too light for carry from just under 4lbs to just over.
My 9mm Shield came in last week (my first tupperware pistol -- couldn't resist the price after rebate), and I put in an Apex sear today.
I guess I was lucky. I expected a horrible factory trigger. After a little dry firing and with a small dab of grease on the factory sear the trigger pull averaged 5 lb. 6 oz. If I hadn't already ordered an Apex sear before the pistol arrived I might have just done some minor work on the original.
The Apex (sear only, factory springs) reduced trigger pull to an average of 3 lb. 14 oz., so right at 1.5 lb. reduction.
The trigger bar loop gap from the factory was .024", which left the trigger break and reset out a bit farther than necessary even with the Apex sear. I took the gap down to .016", which still left about .110" of overtravel measured rear of the trigger at the top (held punches behind the trigger). I wouldn't want it in much closer, and the existing amount of overtravel is tolerable.
While I had it apart I fixed the horribly stiff manual safety. I didn't do any major reshaping, just broke sharp edges and a light polish on the safety and plunger. I cleaned all the gunk out of the plunger channel. Much better now. I still may have to build up the lever a little with Acraglas.
The striker block and tunnel could use cleaning up, but after reading about how stubborn rear sights on Shields are I think I'll just let it be. The roughness isn't noticeable during shooting and doesn't seem to harm the actual trigger break. Maybe it will smooth out in time.
I fired 100 rounds of lead reloads yesterday without a hitch except for sore thumbs and fingers from loading the magazines. Those springs sure are stout. I'm looking forward to shooting next weekend with the improved trigger.
I went the opposite way I opened the shepherd hook up a touch to reduce the trigger take-up, also polished the top of the hook that engages with the sear. I was more concerned with a smooth crisp trigger pull than the reset. Just an individual preference.