Parker Gun Collectors Association Forums  

Go Back   Parker Gun Collectors Association Forums Parker Forums General Parker Discussions

Notices

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Unread 01-29-2015, 11:28 PM   #1
Member
J. A. EARLY
PGCA Member
 
Jerry Harlow's Avatar

Member Info
 
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 2,148
Thanks: 4,729
Thanked 3,084 Times in 997 Posts

Default

What you may have is a missing or reversed spring. There is a small spring in there that keeps tension on the two triggers to keep them in contact with the sears. Is this the slack you speak of?

Go to the Home Page, on the left Technical Information and see part number 10 in the diagram. Also look at the trigger plate behind your triggers and there should be a flush screw coming to the bottom of the floor plate from inside the gun. If you just see a hole, the spring and screw are missing. If there is a screw apparent, the spring may have been put in reversed putting downward pressure on the triggers causing slack between them and the sears. A common reassembly problem for someone working on a gun that just does not know.

With the gun upside down and safety off and gun unloaded obviously, move the trigger as if pulling it until it contacts the sear. Let go and if it springs back up, the spring is reversed.

Very easily corrected in ten minutes if it is reversed.
Jerry Harlow is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 01-30-2015, 04:56 PM   #2
Member
Chaz Cole
Forum Associate
 
chazcole's Avatar

Member Info
 
Join Date: Jan 2015
Posts: 31
Thanks: 36
Thanked 48 Times in 7 Posts

Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jerry Harlow View Post
What you may have is a missing or reversed spring. There is a small spring in there that keeps tension on the two triggers to keep them in contact with the sears. Is this the slack you speak of?

Go to the Home Page, on the left Technical Information and see part number 10 in the diagram. Also look at the trigger plate behind your triggers and there should be a flush screw coming to the bottom of the floor plate from inside the gun. If you just see a hole, the spring and screw are missing. If there is a screw apparent, the spring may have been put in reversed putting downward pressure on the triggers causing slack between them and the sears. A common reassembly problem for someone working on a gun that just does not know.

With the gun upside down and safety off and gun unloaded obviously, move the trigger as if pulling it until it contacts the sear. Let go and if it springs back up, the spring is reversed.

Very easily corrected in ten minutes if it is reversed.
I tried holding it upside down and the trigger did spring back up. How do you go about reversing the spring?
chazcole is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 01-30-2015, 05:03 PM   #3
Member
J. A. EARLY
PGCA Member
 
Jerry Harlow's Avatar

Member Info
 
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 2,148
Thanks: 4,729
Thanked 3,084 Times in 997 Posts

Default

You have to remove the trigger guard and then the floor plate to get to it. You need correctly sized screwdriver bits so you do not mar your screws.

Brian Dudley has put together a step by step procedure you can find on the home page; number 35 under Parker FAQs.
Jerry Harlow is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:44 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1998 - 2025, Parkerguns.org
Copyright © 2004 Design par Megatekno
- 2008 style update 3.7 avec l'autorisation de son auteur par Stradfred.