This is a home made, free, easy to do fix that can be accomplished in a few minutes. I have done this myself and I have gone from one failure to #### the trigger every 10-20 rounds, to zero failures in a trial of 200 rounds.
The tools you will need:
Table vice, file, tape measure and fine sand paper.
First of all let me tell you how I came to think of this. After reading all the "gremlin" threads on here I came to the conclusion that Obiwanbonjovi was right about what is causing the problem:
A few other fixes were suggested by some but they seemed unnecessarily complicated to me. If the striker nose forces the sear too far down during its rearward travel, the simplest solution seemed to be shortening the striker nose a tiny bit, so that when it pushes down the sear, it pushes it less distance, equal to the amount of material (nose length) removed.
So, I took the striker, put it in a vice, (wrapped in cloth to protect it while being squeezed by the vice) and filed down about 1/32; that will probably be enough.
Any more than that and you are risking other kinds of failures.
When you do this, make sure you maintain the same slope as before and make sure you do it straight.
When you've filed as much as you want, take some very fine sand paper to the filed area and smooth it out so that there are no burrs or protruding surfaces, however small. This way the striker nose pushes on the sear equally at all points of contact.
Here is a picture of it, although the words are self explanatory:
The area indicated by the orange pointer is the striker nose and that's what you file down.
As I mentioned before, after doing the mod to the striker, I went to the range with the rifle and an extra, unmodified striker.
I tried both. The filed one so far has produced no further failures in 200 rounds which were shot in all possible ways.
After I put the unmodified striker back in, I got repeated failures again, within the first 20 rounds.
I hope this works for you as well as it did for me.
The tools you will need:
Table vice, file, tape measure and fine sand paper.
First of all let me tell you how I came to think of this. After reading all the "gremlin" threads on here I came to the conclusion that Obiwanbonjovi was right about what is causing the problem:
obiwanbonjovi said:"From what I have read all over this page it seems the general belief is that the gremlin is caused by the bolt carrier failing to disconnect the trigger. Until today that was my understanding. Wrong, the carriers seem to disconnect trigger every time.
The problem is caused by the striker re-connecting trigger, by forcing the sear down too far during its rearward travel.
A few other fixes were suggested by some but they seemed unnecessarily complicated to me. If the striker nose forces the sear too far down during its rearward travel, the simplest solution seemed to be shortening the striker nose a tiny bit, so that when it pushes down the sear, it pushes it less distance, equal to the amount of material (nose length) removed.
So, I took the striker, put it in a vice, (wrapped in cloth to protect it while being squeezed by the vice) and filed down about 1/32; that will probably be enough.
Any more than that and you are risking other kinds of failures.
When you do this, make sure you maintain the same slope as before and make sure you do it straight.
When you've filed as much as you want, take some very fine sand paper to the filed area and smooth it out so that there are no burrs or protruding surfaces, however small. This way the striker nose pushes on the sear equally at all points of contact.
Here is a picture of it, although the words are self explanatory:
The area indicated by the orange pointer is the striker nose and that's what you file down.

As I mentioned before, after doing the mod to the striker, I went to the range with the rifle and an extra, unmodified striker.
I tried both. The filed one so far has produced no further failures in 200 rounds which were shot in all possible ways.
After I put the unmodified striker back in, I got repeated failures again, within the first 20 rounds.
I hope this works for you as well as it did for me.
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