Product reviews: Sig Sauer SRT Kit P226, P228, P229, P227

Sig Sauer SRT Kit P226, P228, P229, P227

Sig Sauer SRT Kit P226, P228, P229, P227
5 stars
 34 review(s)
4 stars
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3 stars
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David Croft

Jan 16, 2019



I have got to say.. the way ppl talk about dramatic differences with the SRT. I don't see it. In fact I took two identical p226's one with SRT one without and over about 10 tests my roommate and I measured the difference. The normal one already resets almost at the back. The SRT makes about a 2 maybe 3mm difference. I just don't see how one can claim this is life changing. When you release from the trigger after firing a round, you surpass the normal rest any way. Because it already resets almost at the back. Also I've seen on several forums that they aren't as safe. I'll keep it, but I'm not impressed. I think it's a gimmick and Sig users are so loyal they just soak up the hype. If you want a real trigger make over, change the mainspring to a 17# Wolfe springs spring, with the handles off dry fire and notice how the sear interfaces with the hammer and trigger bar, and polish this areas to mirror smooth. Will be very small areas. And you have to work really slow. Can't stress that enough. Then coat with a light gun oil film and reassemble. You'll notice a drastic difference in DA/SA pull and you'll get a very smooth break. This is what a gunsmith would do for $250, $300. A sig is so easy to work on. Anyone can do it.
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