okay.... please excuse my "illustrations" i'm not so good at drawing those arrows and things in the editing programs hehehe
I'm just gonna dump the pics here and then sort them out and add some comments.
The only two working tools you will require are a flat fine or xfine stone and a 1/8th tapered, 3 side the same , xfine triangular file, do not use a diamond type file no matter how fine. all of the following is perfromed with the triangular file, and if the stone is used it will be mentioned.
Once hammer hook wall clearancing has been established (scroll down the page for those instructions), proceed with the following
okay so you have your trigger group in pieces
take your trigger and break it down to disconnect, sear/trigger and pin. some of these are a pain in the ass to remove, but don't even start working your trigger parts unless you can seperate these two parts.
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POLISH only, the two angled flats, removing parkerizing only. USE STONE for top pad and the file for the smaller lower pad, maintain a sharp edge and debur edge only. This edge is hardness critical and excess filing will cause premature failure of this part due to wear. It and the rear hammer hooks are what keep you safe from out of control or out of battery fire, keep this in mind when working these parts.
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next we take the trigger sear part, polish the sides, first at the bottom, below the sear and up to the sear, working across the part, bring to polish and remove any machining marks.... one side is usually worse than the other. Some deeper machining marks may have to be left alone so reach a reasonable polish and enough is enough. REMEMBER, at this point we are doing nothing to the sear surfaces, only the sides of the trigger body itself.
Then move to the top side of the trigger and work the sides next to the sear protrusions to a polish, carefully keeping with the sear angle, down along the part. The triangular file will allow you to clean into the 90 degree edges where sear protrudes from trigger body. work these edges carefully, very carefully, but get them cleaned up as most often these are not 90 degree in the corners...... be VERY carefull not to affect the sear surfaces during this step, just the metal of the trigger body. bring to polish both sides.
with the sides of the trigger polished , next we take the file and very gently polish the parkerizing from the upper sear faces. The lower edges of the sear angle where the under side of the sear meets the upper sear faces are critical and hardness critical so be very careful keeping these forming a nice clean sharp edge without removing material other than parkerizing and burring.
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This pic shows the 3 locations on the hammer that get our attention. not shown is the large pad on one side that rubs the innner wall of the trigger housing and the safety locks on the top edge of this part. You can polish this pad, only the pad, only deburr the edges as needed if at all. And you can polish the areas around the hammer pin hole, both sides if desired.
other wise, here we have a hammer and the HAMMER HOOK WALL is pointed to. Take your assembled trigger group, prior to any work, lock the hammer back into the sear and as you push "forward" on the back of the actual trigger, try and push down the hammer..... if it doesn't travel freely, if it "drags" on the sear edge, the hammer hook wall will need to be filed to 100% clearance prior to taking any steps to further work on trigger. This should be the first pic in line and the first step you take before all others.
This clearancing can be done with the trigger group assembled , under good light, with the 1/8, tapered xfine file BEING EXTREMELY CAUTIOUS to ONLY fille the hammer hook wall, right to the hammer hook surfaces BUT AGAIN..... DO NOT DISTURB the inside surfaces of the front hammer hooks. This is a tedious task, tested between filings by locking the hammer repeating the test outlined above. keep clearancing until you have 100% clearance and the sear and hammer no longer contact between sear edge and hammer hook wall. Once finished, your sear will be at full rest and any further trigger work can now commence.
Now, the front hammer hooks that engage the sear, these are NOT TO BE MUCKED WITH, polish ONLY. look at the hooks, you will see the inside flats, these engage the sear. remove parkerizing only, allow minor machining marks in these surfaces to wear themselves in, do not attempt to file true and flat. IF you feel a slight tick once assembled and you pull the first stage but not to break and you feel a small tick in the trigger..... you may have to gently debur the corners where the hammer hook wall meets the inside front hammer hooks...... but hopefully you were carefull during wall clearancing

there is one more small angle on the front hammer hooks on the bottom outside, this is what rides down the top sear surfaces as the hammer goes into lockup. polish these small pads, DO NOT alter angle. DO NOT attempt to shorten or otherwise modify angles of the front trigger hooks, they are cleaned up for feel only and your rifle can become very dangerous , very fast if these hooks are shortened or hardness is disturbed.
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Now the rear hammer hooks.... THE ONLY location in your entire trigger group that is modified to reduce trigger pull. But first, Polish the top flats only, maintain angle. Look at the very tips of the rear hammer hooks. you will see a flat and a small pad at an angle under the flat tips. Polish only, this small angled pad, this bears against and pushes back the disconnect.
Then with the stone, and your trigger group fully assembled AND lightly greased, evenly and squarely, remove very small amounts off the tip ends of the rear hammer hooks. with each slight working of the stone, FIRST take the file and debur the top edge of this surface as needed but be careful not to break the angle, SECOND push the hammer down until it begins to contact the face of the disconnect and look straight down, ar the tips even and true to the disconnect? Remember these observations and carefully correct if need be as you stone the tips. again keep the tips flat and square and test often. Last of all , DO NOT REDUCE A CHINESE TRIGGER GROUP TO UNDER 5 LBS or you are flirting with disaster. You don't have to believe me....... but don't say i did not warn you.
as for increasing trigger pull if you have gone slightly too far? scroll up and look at the pics..... the back spine flat of the trigger body, where the disconnect would come into contact, is filed or stoned at this point to gain a small recovery in trigger pull weight..... but it's a small recovery so best thing is to not need to do it at all
hope this helps..... right now with dial up it's the best i can do for ya. There are other places to polish as well, but as for hammer and trigger/sear alterations...... I've covered all you need to know...... forget everything else you have been shown , told or read on the internet about achieving a clean 1st stage and adjusting trigger pull. There is only ONE correct procedure to follow and above is my attempt to shed some light on it. Have fun
