I have a very long first stage pull. But I have the second stage short and crisp with about a half mm to the trigger stop (screw D)
When I look at my trigger unit, as it looks in the attached image, the line on the cam is at 6 o'clock, just as in the image. The only way I can physically see the trigger shortening, is to turn the cam outside of the two lines on the trigger unit, I see the trigger move back as I turn between 8 o'clock and 12 oclock. Now my first stage is nice, shorter, and the second stage still crisp and short (it didn't change, which is great)
My question is, the manual says the pivot must stay always inside the sector limited by the two indexes as there is a chance you can't engage the hammer, but I can easily cock the hammer in the trigger unit and it does what it should when pull the trigger. I havent cocked it installed in the pistol yet, but I assume it will be the same.
Before I do, is this safe to continue with the line of the cam at 9 o'clock? Is there a chance that the previous owner disassembled the trigger unit and just installed the cam with a rotation different to the factory installation? Would this cause multiple shots on one pull if it's not done right?
A quick second question, is it safe to grease (tetragun) any of the trigger action? this gun sat for maybe a year without being fired, and things seem a little dry.
Thanks!
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