I managed to get a new spring made but now the trigger assembly is not fitting together right when installed. Hopefully the pics show up. The last pics with out the text is the only way I can get the whole thing together but it is not correct. I must be missing something here. Any ideas?
If I set the triggers to safe and try to assemble the two pieces together this happens. Now the safety button is forced forward by the pressure of the trigger springs. Now the safety button will not go back (or to the left in the pic). I've been working on this for a week now and it looks so simple I must be missing something. I've never had this much trouble with a firearm before.
its hard to tell when not in person but the trigger pivot pin holes spatially look like they should be lined up with the hole in the receiver. IE move the triggers forward so the pivot holes are lined up with the hole in the receiver then pin though all of them. From what I can tell you don't have a pivot point for the triggers and that would line up the safety so it intercepts the back of the triggers the way it should be..
Try what Helix is suggesting and move those triggers down into the "fire" position so that pin in on the "flat" and see if that doesn't solve your problem. I have a Crescent gun which is a kissing cousin to yours and the triggers have to be in the fire position for the safety to work properly.
I did as suggested. It took a considerable amount of force to make it go back. This makes it very difficult to move the safety when assembled. Still must be missing something but I am further then I was.
I will assemble the whole gun. Maybe the hammers have something to do with it too?
I tried it. I attached a pic of what happened. I am still unable to move the safety far enough forward to allow the triggers to do anything although now it can actually be put together. Further then I was.
The cylinder at the rear that has the safety guide pin in it and also retains the trigger springs, it needs a washer below the spring. That will lift the safety assembly higher clearing the triggers
Dumb question.. but is the Barrel Locking Lever in the "locked" or "closed barrel" position when your playing with the magical monkey motion pieces inside the tang area?
How tight is the stock bolt? I wonder if w/o the stock in place if you compressing the tangs together which is closing the space needed to clear the safety.
I put it back together and cocked it but same result. Maybe when the gunsmith did do something even though my inexperienced eye can't imagine what. It just won't go back together right.
Looking at your first pic you have a lot of clearance between the safety button and the safety. Did you take apart your gun to have the spring made or did he? Im assuming he made a new trigger spring? Is it the same gauge as the one before? If the gauge is smaller, then the space it takes is smaller causing the tolerance problem. I know your saying that there was no washer there before but it will solve your problem. So you can solve your problem or just keep wondering. It wont be a thick washer, just a thin shimming washer will do.
I made the spring but it was for top lever to open the gun for loading. It was sent through the gun shop I bought it from and they say the gunsmith did not do anything but when I talked to the gunsmith he said he could not repair it in a professional manner. The shop was very dishonest in my dealings with them after the original problem happened. I will never be going back and have nothing nice to say about them. So I am not entirely sure if the gunsmith did anything or not. So I am just going to sell it off to a guy that buys older guns for parts and take my loss. I greatly appreciate you guys trying to help me.
Jeremy
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Related Threads
?
?
?
?
?
The Firearms Forum
2.2M posts
71.1K members
Since 2003
A forum community dedicated to all firearm owners and enthusiasts. Come join the discussion about optics, hunting, gunsmithing, styles, reviews, accessories, classifieds, and more!