Hi.
Right from the start I want to say that this may be nothing, I don't exactly know if the gun action should work that way or not.
Basically, I was just playing with my gun (CZ TS2) by pulling the trigger (yes, unloaded) and enjoying the trigger breaking. However, I noticed something strange. Right when I hit the wall, if I pull the trigger really, really slowly, I can feel that it passes some kind of barrier, it snaps like a 1mm backward. Look at this:
https://i.imgur.com/dVsRIAx.mp41-2s before the video ends you can see the trigger snapping backward. It's really small, you have to really focus, but it's there.
I thought this was maybe due to gunk in the trigger bar or something, but then I tried doing what I was doing before, but without the slide on. And I noticed, that when this "snap" is happening, it is the sear that is moving. It's not moving far enough to drop the hammer (same as in previous video - "snap" happens, but hammer is still cocked). Here's the video:
https://i.imgur.com/AGTgoOH.mp4Here it's more noticeable than in the video of the trigger. You can see the sear moving.
Now, I would think that this is how it's supposed to work - I pull the trigger some distance, then the sear "kinda engages" (it moves and I can feel it in the trigger), then I pull just a tiny lil' bit more - and break happens, hammer falls.
However (it's not quite shown in the video), if I get pass this "snap" without dropping the hammer, I get my finger of the trigger and I try again (really slowly) - there's no "snap" in the trigger. A clean "takeup, wall, crisp break", no "snap" before the break. That's what got me thinking - if the hammer can be dropped without this sear movement before - then maybe I can do something to eliminate this thing, so I would have cleaner trigger breaks.
So, is this something that is supposed to be here? And if not, can I somehow get rid of that? I mainly shoot bullseye (freestyle) and sometimes it can screw up my shot, because my hand thinks that this is the break and can involuntarily flinch, when in fact it's just a snap in the trigger due to the sear moving.