It’s a mass-produced OEM trigger. Lots of room for improvement there.First, what is wrong with the OEM trigger it has now?
I don't disagree with that. Many mass produced products leave a lot of room for improvement.It’s a mass-produced OEM trigger. Lots of room for improvement there.
I have a Timmney. With all of them you are not going to get a 1911 feel. The Timmney is an improvement but not a huge one.
You must have gotten a bad trigger from ZEV then. I have them in probably 3 builds and I would take them over any other aftermarket trigger. The only downside to me is the price on them. Apex are good but nothing to get excited about.I’ve tried every Glock trigger out there and my experience has been that the Timney is noticeably better than all of the others I’ve tried. The most monumental piece of crap I spent $225 on was the Zev fulcrum trigger.
CMC and Apex are a close second to the Timney IMO.
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You are one of those people...Factory plus ammo
Factory plus ammo
He’s not wrong. Other than the Timney, the best trigger on any Glock I own in my first Glock, a G23 Gen 4 with probably 14K rounds. Completely stock trigger. Smooth as a greased baby booty!You are one of those people...
That wasn't the question the OP left though. Anyone who has ever shot a Glock will tell you the trigger is far from prefect. And of course the trigger will smooth out after a break in period. But that won't solve all the issues with a Glock trigger. Stock and ammo is what everyone says is the best training method. This isn't the same argument.He’s not wrong. Other than the Timney, the best trigger on any Glock I own in my first Glock, a G23 Gen 4 with probably 14K rounds. Completely stock trigger. Smooth as a greased baby booty!
Probably took north of 6K rounds to start really getting nice.
But at todays ammo prices???
Yup. Very few if any aftermarket glock triggers are as safe or reliable as a factory trigger. High round counts or even dry fire with help smooth the trigger out, and will help you become a better shooter in the long runYou are one of those people...
Triggers do not need to be perfect. There is no perfect trigger, they all have pros and cons. Even the best high end olympic target pistol triggers have issues.That wasn't the question the OP left though. Anyone who has ever shot a Glock will tell you the trigger is far from prefect. And of course the trigger will smooth out after a break in period. But that won't solve all the issues with a Glock trigger. Stock and ammo is what everyone says is the best training method. This isn't the same argument.