Author Topic: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety  (Read 19269 times)

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Offline Yer

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Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #15 on: August 04, 2013, 04:09:10 PM »
I hold my pistols a bit differently: my thumbs ride each other and my index finger bends down a bit from an earlier injury
Remington R1 Enhanced, Chiappa Rhino 200DS, Sarsilmaz K2 45.
No one remembers the name of trampled flowers. Fallen birds await the wind before they try again. Prayers will not save us. Only the will to fight can change our world.

Offline harkamus

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Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #16 on: August 04, 2013, 05:01:28 PM »
I hold my pistols a bit differently: my thumbs ride each other and my index finger bends down a bit from an earlier injury

Gotcha. Should be fine then with that kinda grip.

Offline Yer

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Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #17 on: August 05, 2013, 10:35:54 AM »
yeah most instructors watch my grip and either say its not right or "I guess you can do it that way" After I show them a 10 round 2" group at 10 yards rapid fire they just move on.
Remington R1 Enhanced, Chiappa Rhino 200DS, Sarsilmaz K2 45.
No one remembers the name of trampled flowers. Fallen birds await the wind before they try again. Prayers will not save us. Only the will to fight can change our world.

Offline 1SOW

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Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #18 on: August 05, 2013, 04:05:18 PM »
Check online and ask Stuart which action is used by the most winning CZ pistols world-wide and here in the US in Bianchi or USPSA including Matt Mink, Angus Hobdell, Etc etc-- Decocker or Safety?
I'm not challenging what can be done to a decocker, just what's used by the pro competition shooters.
« Last Edit: August 05, 2013, 04:12:36 PM by 1SOW »

Offline Stuart

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Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #19 on: August 05, 2013, 05:47:50 PM »
Oh...there is no doubt that a non firing pin block SP01 Shadow is the most popular gun on the shooting circuit.

but that wasn't Yer's question. his question was did the decocker make the feel of the trigger stiffer than a safety version of the same gun.

I said no, because in my opinion the triggers on both a safety model SP01 and decocker model SP01 are equally heavy and creepy out of the box. Given one does a trigger job to both, they will both be equally good. that the decocker parts make no difference in the feel of the trigger.

Now, if you go back to the question, what would you "prefer" as a competition gun. I would say a "Non firing pin block" gun. The reason for this would be shorter reset point, simpler action. Whether that is a decocker gun or safety gun doesn't matter. Just happens CZ decockers only come with a firing pin block.

So hopefully that makes some sense.

Offline harkamus

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Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #20 on: August 05, 2013, 06:14:46 PM »
The reason for this would be shorter reset point, simpler action.
While we're on the same topic, how much shorter is the reset comparing an SP-01 with the SRT versus a Shadow with an SRT?

Offline 1SOW

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Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #21 on: August 05, 2013, 08:47:00 PM »
Your correct of course.  I was looking at it as "the best overall" Trigger, not the 'stiffness".
My bad. Sorry

Offline Yer

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Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #22 on: August 06, 2013, 03:19:45 AM »
Your correct of course.  I was looking at it as "the best overall" Trigger, not the 'stiffness".
My bad. Sorry

you still helped and the question encompasses all aspects, including the information you gave so thank you.

I will probably have a reset action job as well as a race trigger job done on it to put it on par with non-FPB competition pistols.

Just watched City of God, fantastic movie. Read Blood Meridian, one of my favorite books by far
Remington R1 Enhanced, Chiappa Rhino 200DS, Sarsilmaz K2 45.
No one remembers the name of trampled flowers. Fallen birds await the wind before they try again. Prayers will not save us. Only the will to fight can change our world.

Offline jabbermurph

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Re: Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #23 on: August 06, 2013, 09:36:05 AM »
yeah most instructors watch my grip and either say its not right or "I guess you can do it that way" After I show them a 10 round 2" group at 10 yards rapid fire they just move on.

Dang!!! In rapid fire? What are your split times?  And what pistol? ???

Czech's in the mail

SP-01 "Shadeaux" by CGW

HDR P-01 by CGW

P-07 .40 cal

Tactical Sports .40 cal

Offline Yer

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Re: Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #24 on: August 06, 2013, 11:46:09 AM »
yeah most instructors watch my grip and either say its not right or "I guess you can do it that way" After I show them a 10 round 2" group at 10 yards rapid fire they just move on.

Dang!!! In rapid fire? What are your split times?  And what pistol? ???

Czech's in the mail

I only do a max of 10 bullets whenever I feel like just emptying it. I've been doing it for years, so its really just about realigning it and following that "now" feeling you get. But the CZ has done the best, but its also been one of the heavier ones I've used.
Rapid fire won't do me any good in a competition. again I do ten rounds not the 2 you normally use to remove a target. I need to work on double taps and switching targets. But I'm confident in my accuracy for SD, but not much else at all =/
Remington R1 Enhanced, Chiappa Rhino 200DS, Sarsilmaz K2 45.
No one remembers the name of trampled flowers. Fallen birds await the wind before they try again. Prayers will not save us. Only the will to fight can change our world.

Offline chowee21

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Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #25 on: August 19, 2013, 01:06:05 AM »
Safety.

Offline Xyrium

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Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #26 on: August 26, 2013, 03:12:08 PM »
I vote for nothing on a practice pistol, but a decocker on the SD one.

Offline motosapiens

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Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #27 on: August 28, 2013, 04:58:51 PM »
I will probably have a reset action job as well as a race trigger job done on it to put it on par with non-FPB competition pistols.

IMHO, the only reason to go that route is if you want a 40, since a shadow 40 isn't an option. I tricked up my 75b, and it's very very nice, but it also cost more than a spo1 shadow when it was all said and done. If you're going to compete, and you're going to get a 9mm, just get the right gun to start with and save some time and money.

Offline IDescribe

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Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #28 on: August 28, 2013, 06:35:05 PM »
Yer, you can get every bit as high a grip with a safety model as a decocker.  That shouldn't factor into your decision.  You also shouldn't factor in your concerns over manually decocking one.  The simple fact that you are concerned about it takes you out of the running for someone who is going to blow it.  I just Frog-lubed my thumb and did it over and over.  It's not difficult.  It's not iffy.   If I can do it one-handed with my thumb lubed, you can do it with a little sweat out at the range.  I understand your concern.  You feel like when you pull the trigger, the hammer will suddenly exert force and might slip from your thumb if you're not holding it right, but that's not how you do it in practice.  In practice you pull back the hammer with your thumb first, then pull the trigger, then let the hammer down.  There's no sudden force against your thumb because your thumb is already fully supporting the hammer when you pull the trigger.  If you pay attention to what you're doing, you're not going to blow it.  NOW...

... just get the right gun to start with and save some time and money.

The above quote is key.  If you want to compete, you should receive a gun with a good trigger.  If you want one with an FPB, get one, and if you want one with a decocker, knock yourself out, but get it WITH a decent trigger.  This means you buy a Shadow, or you buy an SP-01 Tactical from a custom shop and have them work the trigger over before they send it to you.  The stock 75/SP-01 trigger sucks.  I'm not saying you have to get every single custom option you want up front, but at least a trigger job with a race hammer.  And since the hammer is an external modification, make sure whatever hammer you get qualifies as an OEM part so that your gun isn't disqualified from Production/SSP.

The extra $260 for a Shadow or $250-$500 for some gunsmithing up front will make you happier in the long run.  I promise.  ;)

Offline Yer

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Re: SP01 Throwdown: Decocker vs Safety
« Reply #29 on: August 29, 2013, 12:56:50 AM »
Yer, you can get every bit as high a grip with a safety model as a decocker.  That shouldn't factor into your decision.  You also shouldn't factor in your concerns over manually decocking one.  The simple fact that you are concerned about it takes you out of the running for someone who is going to blow it.  I just Frog-lubed my thumb and did it over and over.  It's not difficult.  It's not iffy.   If I can do it one-handed with my thumb lubed, you can do it with a little sweat out at the range.  I understand your concern.  You feel like when you pull the trigger, the hammer will suddenly exert force and might slip from your thumb if you're not holding it right, but that's not how you do it in practice.  In practice you pull back the hammer with your thumb first, then pull the trigger, then let the hammer down.  There's no sudden force against your thumb because your thumb is already fully supporting the hammer when you pull the trigger.  If you pay attention to what you're doing, you're not going to blow it.  NOW...

... just get the right gun to start with and save some time and money.

The above quote is key.  If you want to compete, you should receive a gun with a good trigger.  If you want one with an FPB, get one, and if you want one with a decocker, knock yourself out, but get it WITH a decent trigger.  This means you buy a Shadow, or you buy an SP-01 Tactical from a custom shop and have them work the trigger over before they send it to you.  The stock 75/SP-01 trigger sucks.  I'm not saying you have to get every single custom option you want up front, but at least a trigger job with a race hammer.  And since the hammer is an external modification, make sure whatever hammer you get qualifies as an OEM part so that your gun isn't disqualified from Production/SSP.

The extra $260 for a Shadow or $250-$500 for some gunsmithing up front will make you happier in the long run.  I promise.  ;)

Thanks ID, its more of the myth of the "decocker triggers are rougher than safeties" that lead me away from decockers at first. BUT Stuart and David Milam both say it does not affect the trigger.
I am looking an SP-01 for competition, just have to find a new or like-new one (good luck to me right?)
And now I'm also drooling over a friend's compact. Might have to grab that for EDC. Oh no I got the bug
Remington R1 Enhanced, Chiappa Rhino 200DS, Sarsilmaz K2 45.
No one remembers the name of trampled flowers. Fallen birds await the wind before they try again. Prayers will not save us. Only the will to fight can change our world.