686s are known for having great triggers. I don't want a trigger job on mine because I'm afraid it would mess it up. I've never heard of a strain screw being THAT tight, usually they are loose because people back them out to do a 'trigger job' which causes problems with light strikes, as pointed out before. If the trigger isn't almost perfect when you've done what you can, somebody with experience needs to look at it. It's just plain wrong for a 686 to have that lousy of a trigger.
This is not good advice in my opinion. S&W can refuse warranty or lifetime service on modified firearms. Better to have them look at it beforehand even if you have to wait.If your mechanically inclined search You Tube for trigger jobs. S&W triggers are not overly complicated. If sent it back you probably won't see it back for months. I've done my own trigger work on all my Smiths and their perfect. You can get spring kits anywhere.
Smith & Wesson will not be responsible for:
• Defects or malfunctions resulting from careless handling,
unauthorized adjustments or modifications made or
attempted by anyone other than a qualified gunsmith following Smith & Wesson authorized procedures, or disassembly beyond the Field Stripping instructions in this manual
Spoke to S&W today. Customer service was polite and efficient. Sent the gun back this evening.
This is the part where I whine and moan about having to send a new gun back blah blah I hate waiting blah blah. You know the drill.
Thanks for the advice guys. I'll let you know how it turns out in 3 weeks.
My prediction, you will be very happy in 3 weeks. One thing for sure, S&W takes customer service very seriously.
I’m having serious trigger pull problems. When I pull the trigger, after between ¼” and ½” of pull, the trigger stacks up, and hard. It stacks so hard, and so early in the pull, that when I finally break through it, there’s enough force to spin that cylinder way, way too fast, and I finish the entire trigger pull with no control whatsoever. It’s as if I was trying to shoot the darn thing as fast as humanly possible.
When I pull the trigger with the cylinder open, I can see the cylinder stop drop at the beginning of the trigger pull. The hang-up seems to be right before the cylinder stop pops back up through its hole. When that stop pops back up, the trigger lightens and pulls normally the rest of the way through.
I just shot it yesterday hoping it would work the problem out, but it didn’t. The problem is just a little less noticeable now, but it’s still bad.
So what should I do?
Why would you have to "violate common human decency" -- you can sell with full disclosure....So what should I do? Should I violate common human decency and sell this expensive defective gun to someone else, cut my losses, and go back to Rugers? Maybe the next guy won't notice the trigger hang up. Should I open this thing up and try to fix it myself? I really don't want to send it back to S&W and wait another 2 weeks to find that they still haven't repaired the problem.
Why would you have to "violate common human decency" -- you can sell with full disclosure.
Do the 66 and the 686 use the same hand spring, the coil spring inside the trigger that puts tension on the hand? I lost mine.
I decided to open it up. Probably the wrong decision, but I thought I'd give it a stoning before sending it back again. That smoothed 99% of the trigger pull up, but made the hitch stick out like a sore thumb. Now it's like there's a 1911 trigger break in the middle of the trigger pull. If I could just get that out of there, This trigger would be like butter. I'm going to keep looking at it. I learned that it's not the interaction between the trigger and the cylinder stop. With the rest of the guts out of it, the trigger moves the cylinder stop without a hitch, especially after some gentle stoning. It must have simply been a coincidence that the hitch happens at the same time that the trigger releases the cylinder stop. I'm stumped.
I just ordered a new hand spring, but I'd like to test out what I've done so far, so can I pull the hand spring out of a 66 and try it in my 686?
I'd loose a ton of money if I did that. As soon as I finally found this gun in stock I paid full retail for it. $759 + tax. I'm not a good enough salesperson to tell a buyer that I bought this gun, don't want it now because it's defective and the manufacturer can't fix it, and still recoup my money on it.