I'm sorry if I offended anyone. But the fact remains this is exactly what I observed when I removed the sideplate:
IIRC, the hand is attached to the trigger, so if the hammer doesn't drag the trigger back far enough....
Jim
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Jim K
The hammer was cocked before the hand had traveled enough to completely rotate the cylinder. I replaced the trigger, and in one case, the hand also, and that solved the problem. With the new triggers in place, the hand was long enough.
Call me liar if you wish, it worked very well for me.
Please understand, I'm not saying what you say is wrong, but neither is what I'm saying "so wrong."
It worked for me, not once, but several times. The old triggers I removed were considerably shorter in the sear area than the new ones I bought.
Bob Wright
Last edited by Bob Wright; July 21, 2012 at 08:02 PM.
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