Does anybody do SRT trigger jobs in Canada?

The installation is very easy, it's just a replacement of the sear and safety lever. The hard part is getting the parts. I was able to pick up a couple of the kits at the Sig Academy two years ago but when I was there last year they were no longer selling them. There is at least one other company in the US selling their version of the SRT kit but once again the problem is getting them to Canada.
 
Sig is now claiming that certain frames need the parts "fitted" so they will no longer sell them and require you to send them your pistol. Check out sigforum and do a search for SRT. I know that there is at least one other company selling their own version of the SRT but I don't know if they sell them seperately or require you to send them your pistol. They probably wont ship to Canada but you never know. There used to be kits for sale on the sigforum EE but I haven't seen any for awhile.
 
The installation is very easy, it's just a replacement of the sear and safety lever. The hard part is getting the parts. I was able to pick up a couple of the kits at the Sig Academy two years ago but when I was there last year they were no longer selling them. There is at least one other company in the US selling their version of the SRT kit but once again the problem is getting them to Canada.

Not necessarily true, all the kits are not the same. The 220 needs a new decocking lever, and the 239 needs a new trigger bar spring.

The other company that you are referring to is probably Total Automation, but their QTR is not a "kit". In order for it to be done, they need your entire frame to work with. It's a COMPLETELY different method than the SRT. It's kinda brilliant, actually.

I do have one friend in the States that has SRT kits available to him, but I'm not sure how he would feel about sending them across the border. Have a look around to see if you can find one, then PM me if you would like me to ask him.
 
The de-cocking lever and trigger bar spring have nothing to do with the SRT kit. I have a 239 with the SRT and the replacement trigger spring is the same part number for those without the SRT.
 
The de-cocking lever and trigger bar spring have nothing to do with the SRT kit. I have a 239 with the SRT and the replacement trigger spring is the same part number for those without the SRT.

I'm no 239 springologist, but as I understand it, they used to come with the straight(ish) springs, while the new spring is the one with the loop in it. Now, it could just be that the older spring was replaced by the newer in all guns at some point, but 239 kits come with a replacement spring. It really shouldn't matter in the short term, but the new spring has proved to be much less prone to breakage.

Also, the 239 kit's trigger bar spring is longer than the 226/9/etc. one. So I think it's important for people to know that although the sear and safety lever are identical across kits, that spring shouldn't be installed in anything other than a 239.
(I could be wrong about the reasoning for the replacement spring, but that doesn't change the fact that it's part of the kit.)


As for the 220 decocking lever, I just had a look at them, and the SRT and non-SRT levers are DRAMATICALLY different. That leads me to believe that the new lever IS important to the 220's SRT. At least if you want it to work.
 
I have a friend who dropped a SRT into his 2213. Made quite the difference to the gun. I can't remember how he aquired the trigger. but cdnn was sellilng them for less then 20$ for a while. It just dropped in and worked.

(edit) my bad, only srt's for sigpro series there, but only 9.95 ht tp://www.cdnninvestments.com/sigsauer2.html
 
Back
Top Bottom