freesoulvw
Member
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2010
- Messages
- 24
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I have posted a few posts on the forum and I have yet to even pick my sigma up from the FFL dealer
. I still let my mind work and spend a little time on the net looking up stuff to see what others are doing.
So my question is this:
Instead of cutting a spring in the trigger assembly/removing springs(by following the "rules") would it be possible to use heat to an advantage in our quest for trigger nirvana?
The reason I ask is that when I go to make say, gas tanks or pannels for hotrods or bikes,ect. We use heat to anneal/temper the metals making them softer thus eaiser to work. I was thinking if it would be the same thing with a spring. Taking some heat to it would change the molecular structure changing the spring weight. I have a super small accurate spring tester that is used for checking spring weights/tolerances for minature springs, maybe I will take apart some bic pens and throw them in the oven or under a torch to see what changes might develop.
I am not one that usually experiments with his own stuff so I dont even plan on doing the "simple" trigger mod on my sigma when I get it, the topics that I post are more a way for me to throw my ideas out in the ring to see if anyone else out there might see them and get his/her brain working and maybe just might find a different way to work the same problem.
Any comments or concerns please post to hear what others think. I am not a scientist so any experiment would be trial and error. There might be smarter folks out there that have formulas for metalurgy, that could work out type of metal+range of heat+time of heat applied=amount of tension removed from said spring....or I could be just talking out of my ***
later guys, have fun

So my question is this:
Instead of cutting a spring in the trigger assembly/removing springs(by following the "rules") would it be possible to use heat to an advantage in our quest for trigger nirvana?
The reason I ask is that when I go to make say, gas tanks or pannels for hotrods or bikes,ect. We use heat to anneal/temper the metals making them softer thus eaiser to work. I was thinking if it would be the same thing with a spring. Taking some heat to it would change the molecular structure changing the spring weight. I have a super small accurate spring tester that is used for checking spring weights/tolerances for minature springs, maybe I will take apart some bic pens and throw them in the oven or under a torch to see what changes might develop.
I am not one that usually experiments with his own stuff so I dont even plan on doing the "simple" trigger mod on my sigma when I get it, the topics that I post are more a way for me to throw my ideas out in the ring to see if anyone else out there might see them and get his/her brain working and maybe just might find a different way to work the same problem.
Any comments or concerns please post to hear what others think. I am not a scientist so any experiment would be trial and error. There might be smarter folks out there that have formulas for metalurgy, that could work out type of metal+range of heat+time of heat applied=amount of tension removed from said spring....or I could be just talking out of my ***
