Light primer strikes 686-6

When this question is posed, my first suggestion is -- check the seating depth of your primers, especially if your misfires actually fire after the second or third try. If factory loads fire with no problem, it's your loads; if factory loads won't fire, it's the gun.
 
From my sample size of 1, even the 'standard power' Wolff Power Rib mainspring needed an extended strain screw and firing pin to reliably set off hard primers.

My 686 is very nice to shoot, but I'd be wary of the Power Rib mainspring in anything but a range toy.
 
First, I would advise you to measure the primers' seating depth.
 
The groove in that mainspring is right where the strain screw contacts it. The groove caused the strain screw to be unable to put the correct pressure on it. A longer strain screw, or replace the mainspring with factory.
 
Primer seating depth is good.

Installed an extended firing pin and tested over the weekend. An improvement for sure, but still getting light strikes, just not as often. Ordered a Wolff full power mainspring and an extended strain screw to try next.
 
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