quickdtoo.
Interesting, I bumped the heck out of the cocked rifle, in all directions, pushed on the hammer as hard as I can. I slapped the side of the stock with a rubber mallet. The hammer spring is very strong and that is good.
There was no way that my 1 lbs trigger would let go, except by pulling the trigger. The transfer bar works well too because the rifle will not fire a round without the follow through. Not will it fire when you let go of the hammer without pulling the trigger. I tried it with primed cases, no intent in the primer. So how much safer is safe?
Besides I fired quite a bunch of loads with that setup, without misfires or what have you. But had to train myself to follow through with the trigger. This is stupid and against all good trigger control principals.
With all other rifles I have, there is no trigger over travel nor follow through.
I had not planed on a 1lbs trigger it just happened and I don't know how I lost the 8oz over a time, only a few guesses. With rounded sear edges and a heavy bump perhaps the trigger could let go?
Personally I don't believe in that silly transfer bar, a rebounding hammer with a half cock is much simpler and just as safe. The biggest safety itself is the exposed hammer. Well there is just no way you can make a gun totally idiot proof and a miss fire could create a hang fire, they can be bad news.
Our police has the 40 cal Glock pistol the safest handgun made but still they keep shooting themselves in the leg when doing fast draw combat shooting. The cocked and locked Mod 1911 45 was deemed not save and required training. Now they have a save Glock that any can shoot fast without training. Hence the hole in the foot. Fred M.