I don't think it's the trigger causing light strikes...
I asked Rick in this thread earlier about one of the "improvements" where the cam pin dish in the upper gets enlarged because the "oversized" cam pins are hitting it when going into battery. Was opening up the dish for cam pin clearance a fix for the light strikes or the FTF/FTE was my question...no response yet.
I think that's what's causing the light strikes. If the cam pin is preventing the carrier from going far enough forward, the firing pin won't hit the primer deep enough.
Even 6MT claims to have shot a bunch of Hirt with no issues which is that terrible "surplus" crap that's not supposed to work in these. Timney triggers are used in other AR10's/AR15's with no issues and no warnings about not using surplus, so really, no, I doubt it has anything to do with the trigger.
The three rifles I've shot were all first batch rifles prior to any repairs or updates.
The rifle I have the most rounds through is the one Onetentyish now owns and he just got it back from ATRS where the upper was opened up for the cam pin. His rifle is one of the first ones that was built and I have well over 100 rounds through it but the problems we were having were not light strikes but pierced primers with a couple different brands of ammo.
We each shot a five round group with the MH with 9 different types of ammo including some surplus I had lying around the first day side by side with my AR-10 and noted which ones worked and which ones didn't in each rifle and compared accuracy with each of us shooting with the MH.
Stormchaser and I gave an honest unbiased report of what we witnessed and I sent Rick a couple emails about some of the issues we had with the rifle which he obviously took seriously as he made changes to the rifles released after that. The thread Stormchaser started to share our findings was deleted by him when he got an infraction for telling off one of the trolls who had to jump all over it because none of the groups were sub moa even though it clearly stated we were shooting in less than ideal conditions and none of the ammo was match grade stuff.
Honestly your all becoming very annoying. On both sides of the ball here. I'm the only person from either side of the argument in the last like 7 pages who owned one and gave there experiences. The rest of you are saying the rifles suck with no proof. And the others swearing it's the best rifle with no proof. Shut up all of you and let people who actually one chime in. They are not giving any feedback in fear of being flamed from one side or the other.
What's actually annoying is people who think that the only people who are allowed to have an opinion are people who own one. I have more rounds through three different modern hunters than most owners on here and I've tried many different types of ammo through them. I'm not bashing or praising it, only reporting what I experienced and trying to understand and maybe sway the opinions of some that have a negative opinion with no first hand experience. I don't think the rifle is perfect but I also don't think it's as bad as some believe it is and it doesn't deserve the flak it gets.
In my opinion Rick went out on a limb and brought us exactly what we were all crying for then as soon as it was released a few people jumped all over it because it wasn't perfect. Sure, it needs a little tweaking here and there but that's how it goes with everything new to the market, eventually you have to get the product in the hands of customers for final testing or you go out of business when your investment is just sitting there not making any money. As long as ATRS is willing to take the rifle back and address any issues experienced by the owner I'd say he's doing his due diligence and deserves our respect. He took a huge risk to do this project, it could have just as easily been stamped restricted by the CFO and he would have lost a lot of money being stuck with an expensive rifle with very little market for it.
In my opinion it is very fairly priced and to say it's not is just plain ignorant. My AR-10 build cost over $3500 retail just to buy the parts and it was restricted. Rick has brought us a product that I thought was going to cost more than he's selling it for and I think that very shortly the bugs will be worked out and it will be a fantastic rifle for the shooters out there that understand ammunition and have experience shooting a semi auto for groups.
I'd be willing to bet that a good percentage of the people who shoot one then complain it won't shoot sub moa have never actually shot a sub moa group in their life with a semi or a bolt action. I'll skip the analogies but the rifle can't make the shooter do their job and it can only show what ammo it likes. Since every barrel is different it's impossible for ATRS to tell owners what ammo their rifle will shoot well unless they were to run a bunch of ammo through each rifle prior to shipping it which is costly both financially and with time which would have to be passed onto the customer which would mean less sales.