Early Hammerli 208 / 215 trigger adjustment
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- Posts: 321
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- Location: New Zealand
Early Hammerli 208 / 215 trigger adjustment
I have an early 208 with the limited-adjustment trigger. The manual warns against ever adjusting screw 261. Why? What does it do? Isn't this tempting? I suspect it's a sear engagement adjustment, but can anyone tell me for sure?
Spencer (bonzer bloke!) has the 215 manual on his site http://www.australiancynic.com This has the same instruction, for the early version of the trigger.
Spencer (bonzer bloke!) has the 215 manual on his site http://www.australiancynic.com This has the same instruction, for the early version of the trigger.
Screw 261 is the 'self destruct' trip adjuster. If you move it the gun will explode if the trigger is moved more than the diameter of a hydrogen atom.
;0)))
;0)))
Last edited by joker on Thu Apr 08, 2010 11:24 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Early Hammerli 208 / 215 trigger adjustment
[quote="Shooting Kiwi"] I suspect it's a sear engagement adjustment, but can anyone tell me for sure? quote]
I do not think it is the sear engagement screw. Could be a screw allowing the 'gap' (the 208 is not a single shot pistol!).
I do not think it is the sear engagement screw. Could be a screw allowing the 'gap' (the 208 is not a single shot pistol!).
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- Posts: 321
- Joined: Fri Apr 20, 2007 3:33 am
- Location: New Zealand
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- Posts: 321
- Joined: Fri Apr 20, 2007 3:33 am
- Location: New Zealand
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- Posts: 321
- Joined: Fri Apr 20, 2007 3:33 am
- Location: New Zealand
the only thing I have ever adjusted on my H208 has been the trigger weight when I first got it, and last year at Arafura Games (with a case or two of ammunition in between) and the overtravel when I first got it. If it ain't broke, etc.Shooting Kiwi wrote:...C'mon, Spencer, surely YOU know the answer to my question!
The need to adjust at Arafura Games came as a surprise. The trigger weight had stayed 'set' after the initial adjust despite routine cleaning in the ultrasonic bath, yet changed after the air transport from Sydney to Darwin (and this pistol has had lots of transporting...)
Looks bad when a Judge's pistol does not breeze through Equipment Control
An inveterate tinkerer on this board has recently added a 208 to his collection, so we should soon get the answer
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NEVER been guilty of using that statement - but I have heard it often enough.David Levene wrote:"But it passed last week" ;-)Spencer wrote:Looks bad when a Judge's pistol does not breeze through Equipment Control
One of our regular EC personnel had some stickers made up to save shooters from voicing the statement.