Question:
I was wondering why CZUB is using a pivot pin instead of a floating pin for that part?
My reasoning: If TRS is broken, you can still reset the trigger manually with pivot pin and the floating pin can and will drop out because spring tension is not holding a pin?
CZ makes a lot of the LEO guns used in Europe. There may be a clause in the requirements package for a semi-permanent trigger pin in one or more of these contracts, or some such. Or maybe they simply feel that being acted on by
finger pressure only, that the calculated "life" (
"mean time between failure") exceeded the life expectancy of the entire gun.
I seem to remember that the contract that created the P01 was for a
lifetime of 30,000 rounds. Stress-wise, that's about as hard as blinking your eye lids 30,000 times. Why increase your chances of failure, just to make it easy on a gun smith ?
In short, that's one of those questions that the reason is so obscure that you may never get an answer.