My M70A had a 8.5 pound trigger. Just too heavy.
I reduced it to 6.5 pounds (heavy, but acceptable) quite easily and the same technique would work with a TT33.
Remove the slide and lift the hammer assemble out of the frame.
After removing both grips, one can see the magazine disconnect piece on the side of the frame. It is a spring loaded tab that engages the cut out notch on the trigger bar.
In this picture you can see that I have pried it out a bit with my screw driver.
I am not a fan of magazine disconnects, so I just pried it straight back and it broke off cleanly.
If you have a TT33, ignore that step. It does not have a disconnect.
In the back, inside of the backstrap is a vertical spring plate that provides the trigger return pressure. A lot of trigger return pressure, which you feel as a heavy trigger.
Push the top of the spring in and let the trigger drop down.
Then wiggle the trigger back and down and out of the pistol.
Pull the spring up and out of the frame.
Note that the small end goes at the bottom of the frame, hooked behind a cross pin. The larger end bears on the end of the trigger bar.
The flat piece of steel is a spring. I put it in a vice and easily filed it skinnier. This reduced the trigger pressure by 2 pounds.
This is what it looks like, re-installed.
The right end here is behind the trigger bar.
I reduced it to 6.5 pounds (heavy, but acceptable) quite easily and the same technique would work with a TT33.
Remove the slide and lift the hammer assemble out of the frame.
After removing both grips, one can see the magazine disconnect piece on the side of the frame. It is a spring loaded tab that engages the cut out notch on the trigger bar.
In this picture you can see that I have pried it out a bit with my screw driver.
I am not a fan of magazine disconnects, so I just pried it straight back and it broke off cleanly.
If you have a TT33, ignore that step. It does not have a disconnect.
In the back, inside of the backstrap is a vertical spring plate that provides the trigger return pressure. A lot of trigger return pressure, which you feel as a heavy trigger.
Push the top of the spring in and let the trigger drop down.
Then wiggle the trigger back and down and out of the pistol.
Pull the spring up and out of the frame.
Note that the small end goes at the bottom of the frame, hooked behind a cross pin. The larger end bears on the end of the trigger bar.
The flat piece of steel is a spring. I put it in a vice and easily filed it skinnier. This reduced the trigger pressure by 2 pounds.
This is what it looks like, re-installed.
The right end here is behind the trigger bar.


















































