Here's one for ya... so I'm at the range today and my Glock 27 is starting to go full auto. I put a mag in it with 9 rounds of .40 Winchester White Box, 165gr. I pulled the trigger and two rounds went off immediately. Pulled the trigger again and two more rounds went off. By this time everyone on the range was looking at my pistol and I. I called the range master over and asked him if he knew anything about Glocks. He's ex-military and really cool. He says yes, takes a look at it and pulls the trigger. His eyes light up and he exclaims, "That's cool as hell!" He continues to shoot two clips of my ammo (luckily I like the guy) calls a buddy of his (owns a gun shop), who I hear exclaim the same thing and offers to swap out my Glock for me. He said the connector could be going bad... so some history...
About three months ago, I installed a Lone Wolf Trigger Stop to reduce play along with their 3.5 lb. connector (from stock 5.5 lb. connector) and 4 lb. striker spring (from stock 5 lb. spring) and polished all of the parts. My pistol shot like a dream! None of my buddies could believe how smooth the trigger felt from stock. Since then, I have put well over three hundred rounds through it without even a single hiccup. I cleaned the whole pistol last night, like I always have (basic field strip and removed the firing pin, extractor and firing pin safety just to check the new spring) and I ran a nylon brush over all of the trigger parts just to remove any build-up. Assembled and checked all of the safeties and dry fired it a couple of times. No big deal.
Went to the range today and it double taps perfectly, one after the other with a single trigger pull. Now, like everyone else at the range...I think that's pretty freakin' cool. Everyone wanted to try it. However, I believe it's very illegal (for me) and could be dangerous in the end (for example, I remove my finger from the trigger after one pull and it continues to fire). Has anyone else ever experienced this? The range master and I looked over the pistol, but I have not disassembled it yet. Everything seems to function perfectly, safety wise, ejection wise and feed wise...it's just leaning towards full auto. Before I send off my carry piece, I'd like some input.
BTW, anyone know a good Glock-smith in FL? Also, this isn't my first Glock and not the first time I've disassembled one either. I own a 23 also and have customized it and my friends 19. Neither of which have ever had a problem. I realize that does not make me a Glock Armorer by any means, but I do have some experience.
About three months ago, I installed a Lone Wolf Trigger Stop to reduce play along with their 3.5 lb. connector (from stock 5.5 lb. connector) and 4 lb. striker spring (from stock 5 lb. spring) and polished all of the parts. My pistol shot like a dream! None of my buddies could believe how smooth the trigger felt from stock. Since then, I have put well over three hundred rounds through it without even a single hiccup. I cleaned the whole pistol last night, like I always have (basic field strip and removed the firing pin, extractor and firing pin safety just to check the new spring) and I ran a nylon brush over all of the trigger parts just to remove any build-up. Assembled and checked all of the safeties and dry fired it a couple of times. No big deal.
Went to the range today and it double taps perfectly, one after the other with a single trigger pull. Now, like everyone else at the range...I think that's pretty freakin' cool. Everyone wanted to try it. However, I believe it's very illegal (for me) and could be dangerous in the end (for example, I remove my finger from the trigger after one pull and it continues to fire). Has anyone else ever experienced this? The range master and I looked over the pistol, but I have not disassembled it yet. Everything seems to function perfectly, safety wise, ejection wise and feed wise...it's just leaning towards full auto. Before I send off my carry piece, I'd like some input.
BTW, anyone know a good Glock-smith in FL? Also, this isn't my first Glock and not the first time I've disassembled one either. I own a 23 also and have customized it and my friends 19. Neither of which have ever had a problem. I realize that does not make me a Glock Armorer by any means, but I do have some experience.