"- It locks out the hammer until the bolt is in battery.
- it engages the trigger bar to the sear only when the bolt is in battery"
This is the part that WmMcLeod is talking about. The trigger and the rebound sear are acting independently from the rest of the rifle.
The SKS uses the disconnector and the bolt to keep the trigger bar away from the sear and a rifle like the FN FAL use the safety sear and the carrier to prevent out of battery discharge. The hammer is kept/locked away from the sear until the bolt is locked down.
I am not familiar with he TG operation on the AR15 style of trigger.
IF you were to ride the action forward and were to pull the trigger before the bolt locks down, what stops the hammer from falling?
Other than that looks nice.
Edit: Well googled it and I guess even in the AR15 TG there isn't anything except you trigger finger reaction time to prevent OOB firing. It's kind of a stand alone trigger group where it is highly unlikely anyone could squeeze, release and squeeze the trigger fast enough to drop the hammer early. So if the trigger sear and hammer engagement were to were down significantly enough the hammer follows the bolt best case scenario. Learn something new every day.
- it engages the trigger bar to the sear only when the bolt is in battery"
This is the part that WmMcLeod is talking about. The trigger and the rebound sear are acting independently from the rest of the rifle.
The SKS uses the disconnector and the bolt to keep the trigger bar away from the sear and a rifle like the FN FAL use the safety sear and the carrier to prevent out of battery discharge. The hammer is kept/locked away from the sear until the bolt is locked down.
I am not familiar with he TG operation on the AR15 style of trigger.
IF you were to ride the action forward and were to pull the trigger before the bolt locks down, what stops the hammer from falling?
Other than that looks nice.
Edit: Well googled it and I guess even in the AR15 TG there isn't anything except you trigger finger reaction time to prevent OOB firing. It's kind of a stand alone trigger group where it is highly unlikely anyone could squeeze, release and squeeze the trigger fast enough to drop the hammer early. So if the trigger sear and hammer engagement were to were down significantly enough the hammer follows the bolt best case scenario. Learn something new every day.
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