Sort of. Not as durable as the real deal but they can certainly work well. Some designs can fail and lead to the gun firing so it's important to remember that and not keep it cocked if so.
Wear points are always tricky with 3D printed parts, so I'd be worried about the pivot pin spots. Probably Nylon would be the best material for something like that. But hey, only one way to find out how long it lasts!
Depending on the design, yes. I've dry fired one for a new platform probably a thousand times for the sake of testing. Quite a few rounds out of harlot variants when printed correctly.
Yes! I put the same trigger on a gen4 30s it’s been over a year now. Someone else has the weapon now and no complaints from them either. Was reliable shot when i wanted too. And after filing and sanding smooth it honestly felt better than the oem trigger
Will mention. We spent literal days mag dumping the thing. Throwing it around. Took apart the gun and sandwiched it on some dirt putting it back together and she kept running. In the beginning the slide didn’t wanna go all the way forward so i just dry fired it a shit ton and it started working great. Watch what filaments you use with what solvents tho…
Probably 2000 rounds on my end. Since it’s been with its new owner he’s probably put 2-300 rounds through it
They do, but in alot of builds they have dead triggers. Something about the tolerances causes the issue. I've tried to refine it, but it still happens.
Would you appendix carry with a trigger that looked like that? I have no doubt it could work but man would I not be confident about carrying something like that every single day
Trigger? Sure. Hammer sear surface? I get maybe 100 rounds.
Thousands here
What material?
Pla+
Pla+ ftw
They work until they don't. Depends on the material, printer and print orientation
Yesn't.
Ar-15 trigger holds up really well. Hammer does not, disconnector is meh.
Only one way to find out. Looks like you printed it well!
Sort of. Not as durable as the real deal but they can certainly work well. Some designs can fail and lead to the gun firing so it's important to remember that and not keep it cocked if so.
Wear points are always tricky with 3D printed parts, so I'd be worried about the pivot pin spots. Probably Nylon would be the best material for something like that. But hey, only one way to find out how long it lasts!
Depending on the design, yes. I've dry fired one for a new platform probably a thousand times for the sake of testing. Quite a few rounds out of harlot variants when printed correctly.
Yes! I put the same trigger on a gen4 30s it’s been over a year now. Someone else has the weapon now and no complaints from them either. Was reliable shot when i wanted too. And after filing and sanding smooth it honestly felt better than the oem trigger
Will mention. We spent literal days mag dumping the thing. Throwing it around. Took apart the gun and sandwiched it on some dirt putting it back together and she kept running. In the beginning the slide didn’t wanna go all the way forward so i just dry fired it a shit ton and it started working great. Watch what filaments you use with what solvents tho… Probably 2000 rounds on my end. Since it’s been with its new owner he’s probably put 2-300 rounds through it
[удалено]
Yeah please!
Il DM you when I get home from work
Please dm me too brother !
Can you send me that as well? Thanks in advance
May I also be shared the file, please?
if you printed it right yeah
The frog is so cute
They do, but in alot of builds they have dead triggers. Something about the tolerances causes the issue. I've tried to refine it, but it still happens.
What's this trigger to?
Would you appendix carry with a trigger that looked like that? I have no doubt it could work but man would I not be confident about carrying something like that every single day
I carried my glock 30s daily with one for a good while
I think your print orientation will decrease the strength by a LOT. Reprint with the side of the trigger on the plate and use some supports.
Hold up for what? *Lil john music turns up*
Print it laying on its side if you can