I bought a 5946 about the same time I got my 92D, and liked the trigger on the pizzagun a whole lot more- plus the fact that the Beretta resets for dry fire. Traded the Smif for another Beretta.
I bought a 5946 about the same time I got my 92D, and liked the trigger on the pizzagun a whole lot more- plus the fact that the Beretta resets for dry fire. Traded the Smif for another Beretta.
"You win 100% of the fights you avoid. If you're not there when it happens, you don't lose." - William Aprill
"I've owned a guitar for 31 years and that sure hasn't made me a musician, let alone an expert. It's made me a guy who owns a guitar."- BBI
Everyone seems to rave about the 92D trigger. On the DA/SA Berettas I’ve had (never had a D), I personally felt the DA pull left a lot to be desired vs. Sigs and 3rd gens. Stacking and a lot of overtravel. Even with my PX4cc, I find it difficult to keep the gun stable when the hammer falls in DA (I have a EP trigger bar which I still need to install—hoping that improves it).
So is the DA pull on a 92D different from the DA pull on a DA/SA 92? Or is it just me?
When I handled a 92D, yes, the trigger stroke was absolute nirvana. At the time, however, no slim grips existed for the 92, so any 92 was a no-go, for me. I did end up with a single-stack S&W 3953, though it went to live with a dear friend, some time after I entered another all-1911-or-revolver phase.
It is quite interesting to speculate what might have been, in my personal gun-totin’ habits, had slim grips existed for the Beretta 92, back then.
Edited to add: When I discovered the slimmer factory SIG trigger option, that finally allowed me to reach the trigger in the forward/DA position, the weapon happened to be a P229 DAK, newly-available in 2004. This started a long, happy time, with DAK, which lasted until the high-bore-axis, combined with the fast-accelerating .40 S&W, the light alloy frame, and my advancing arthritis, started becoming vexing. SIG never made DAK-compatible all-stainless steel frames, so, eventually, I got away from SIG DAK, for duty/carry.
Last edited by Rex G; 04-08-2021 at 11:50 AM.
Retar’d LE. Kinesthetic dufus.
Don’t tread on volcanos!
There are brand-brand, model-model and specimen-specimen differences, but often, the DAO triggers are better than the DA stroke in a DA/SA gun. This is obviously true in a DAK or LEM and I find it to be generally true in the 3rd gen S&W guns and the Beretta 92. The PX4 was offered in a Type C that much better than the DFA/SA or DAO models. More specific to your question, I find a stock DA trigger on a 92 to be a typical mediocre DA trigger pull and the stock trigger on a 92D to be very good.
I am primarily talking about weight/resistance, smoothness and travel distance. Offhand I don't think I have noticed a difference in overtravel or stacking. Others probably have more detailed information.
I had the Wilson Combat spring that was, like, the poundage-equivalent of the D spring. Or maybe even less?
Didn't seem like an issue of pull weight, per se. It just felt like it hung up on something... then overtraveled the __ck out of all that energy. And I'd miss.
If that makes any sense...