Springfield Armory Hellcat Performance Spring Kit from Galloway Precision
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- Опубліковано 10 лют 2025
- In this video we go over the installation of our Performance Spring Kit in the Springfield Armory Hellcat Pistol. Our kit includes the matched striker, blocker, sear, and disconnect springs.
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i really want to do this to my hellcat rdp with stock trigger. whats the pull weight and is the reset shorter now?
they wont tell anyone lol
What's the purpose of these spring kit?
Would this be something to do with an apex trigger or is it doing the same thing that the apex would do?
Apex is just the trigger, Monarch and M-Carbo triggers are adjustable to remove some of the take up. This is a spring kit to reduce trigger pull weight. I lost 1.75lbs of trigger pull with just the kit. You do a little polishing to smooth and eliminated some of the gritty feel from factory and could loose another 0.25lb.
@@davidl416 apex comes with a lighter sear spring as weall as a lighter striker spring. The springs are what reduce trigger pull weight not the trigger shoe itself
@DJ.1001 correct and they are still non adjustable so have the trigger take up of a $200 Taurus. Own a few and switched to M-carbo for almost half the price of Apex. Which allows for spring kits or more ammo depending on your needs or demands
@@davidl416 Dude.....🙄 The Apex trigger "KIT" contains all the same items.
@@davidl416 What part of this Galloway Precision modification is adjustable?
Spring kit work on Hellcat Pro?
Yes, our Hellcat Spring Kit will work with the Pro.
I notice that after you reassemble the pistol, you dry-fire it twice. I've been told that it's bad to dry-fire a pistol; was that bad advice? Why twice? Also, for the Hellcat, you need to dry-fire the pistol in order to disassemble it, same question, why? Maybe because it's OK to dry-fire a limited number of times, just not to do it over and over without any limits?
It will not hurt it if you do it every once in a while. I'd recommend snap caps over dry firing if you are concerned. You do need to dry fire for disassembly.
@@GallowayPrecision OK, thanks for the tips! BTW I did get some snap-caps from Amazon, and in place of the primer it has a piece of rubber that seems really soft to me. You can easily push a fingernail 1mm or so deep into the rubber. I get the feeling that this is way too soft, and is no better than dry-firing. Maybe I need the kind of snap cap that has an internal compression spring, and a metal plug for the 'primer'? Any recommendations?
@@pmirsky658 Google is your friend.