I decided to replace my main spring on my 40 year old Mod 14 because the strain screw was turned in so far that it was bottomed out. I didn't have any misfires but figured that after thousands of rounds and being 40 years old that it was time to replace before I started having problems. I also felt that the hammer fall was slower that normal this last year and my scores were dropping in BE and DR. I received a new S&W main spring from Brownells and preceeded to put it in. Now in the single action mode it's alot harder to pull the hammer back and double action trigger pull is about twice of what it was before the spring replacment. My questions are, will this new spring weaken in time ( meaning should I dry fire it a couple hundred times)? Did S&W change the weight on these new springs? And is there a prefered method of adjusting the strain screw besides turning it all the way in?
The 14 is used for Bullseye shooting and Distinguished Revolver so a misfire while upsetting would not be life threatening. The main reson for the main spring change was the deteriorating accuracy of this gun and I was attributing it to a slower than normal hammer fall and me pulling the gun off target while the hammer was falling. In a Ransom Rest the 14 still shoots fine with the old main spring and this last Bullseye season I shot my old Mod 28 much better so I don't think it's my shooting skills getting worse.
Kirmdog
The 14 is used for Bullseye shooting and Distinguished Revolver so a misfire while upsetting would not be life threatening. The main reson for the main spring change was the deteriorating accuracy of this gun and I was attributing it to a slower than normal hammer fall and me pulling the gun off target while the hammer was falling. In a Ransom Rest the 14 still shoots fine with the old main spring and this last Bullseye season I shot my old Mod 28 much better so I don't think it's my shooting skills getting worse.
Kirmdog