Boriqua
Member
I didnt polish the sides as you did but the inside of the s that drags on the plastic. the grooves on mine were so bad you could feel them easily with your fingernail or tip of a paper clip. Spent time on that and all the grit feeling gone. took out the piggy spring and lighted sanded the groove the sear rides in. Took it out yesterday and put little over 100 rds through it. Oh man the break point is beautiful. At least you can tell where it is since you dont have the whole grit lead up.
I took apart my trigger and cleaned up / polished all the metal internals. This helped a smidge, but felt like the main part of the "grit" was coming from where the "S" piece was rubbing against the plastic S part.
After polishing, when the springs were pressed and the S piece moved in there was no grit. also, without the trigger rear assembly installed and holding the "arm" down, the trigger pull was smooth as glass so I knew it wasn't the spring riding in the column above the actual trigger.
(sorry its hard to pick up in pictures)
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Once reassembled, I noticed this was the part that was causing the gritty trigger.
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After further inspection, I noticed where the laser cut this "s" piece out there were still ridges (even though it felt smooth to my finger).
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I cleaned this part up (with a friends help...my dremel kit had nothing this small). once re-installed i put a drop of oil in there, and re-assembled.
since i have a non-worked sw9ve and then my allied (the one im workin on) I could put both next to eachother and pull the trigger on both.
the allied (worked) is much smoother now...still not m&p smooth, but MUCH better than before. I'm sure this will continue to be a work in progess as I learn more knowledge.