
Part number EC is the D Hammer Spring for a model 8000 Cougar. While all of the springs are very similar in shape and can be interchanged between models, they will not achieve the same results in each model. You will get different results between all of them. Please trust me that the PX4 and Model 92 Berettas have different hammer strut geometry and use different hammer springs. I tried it many times over the years and did not get good results. I do know that the EC spring is normally not a reliable spring in the model 92. Brownell's does sell this part as does LangdonTactical Īs to the fact that you had light strikes with the 13# CS spring and not with the EC spring, I cannot explain that other than it does not sound normal and that there are several factors that could contribute to this. Likely lands in the 12.5 lb to 13 lb range in spring weight, much lighter than the 92D hammer spring, part number UD99001, which is close to a 16 lb spring weight and only available in the Steel Trigger Kit on the Beretta web site. According to your 12# estimation, the eu00043 spring should have decreased the weight and exacerbated the light strikes.Part number EC is the D Hammer Spring for a model 8000 Cougar. It increased trigger weight and got rid of a light strike issue I was having. I did use that second linked part (eu00043) in one of your trigger in a bag kits to replace a 13# spring. Or any 92 hammer springs for that matter at I actually can't find a separate 92 D spring part. Here are the parts I could find at the Beretta website: Primer savings would about cover the cost of the trigger job. I'm pretty sure the D spring would reliably fire small rifle primers and I've got a case of Federal 205s just sitting there. That said, I'm considering sending the D version to LTT for a trigger job with a D spring to see how smooth it can get with a factory-weight spring. They don't need anything else done to them.
Buy beretta d spring plus#
The slides for both went to LTT for the Ameriglo sights plus I had the F converted to decock-only using the stock safeties, and I've installed 12 lb. A LTT Trigger Job in a bag should be even better.I've got an F version (bought new) and a D version (bought used). I’m willing to bet all the PF’er guns referenced here have either factory D mainsprings (16 Lb) or the reduced weight Wilson mainsprings (14 lb or 12 Lb). Which you should be testing anyhow to ensure feeding reliability.There is currently a lot of love for the PX4 but in stock / base form it is a bit of a diamond in the rough.

If you'd want something lighter I would drop down to a D/16lb spring and test your night stand ammo just to be sure. If it was my go to night stand gun and I wanted it to set off anything and everything I wouldn't drop from the factory spring weight. Wilson combat also offers 13lb and 12lb hammer springs that I would only recommend for competion. Nothing a quick rack of the slide didn't fix. The 14lb spring has only given me a light strike once or twice. I also don't like having to test each batch of ammo or when switching manufactures of ammo. This may lessens the chance of a hard or poorly set primer but doesn't mean it won't happen. I only run factory brass ammo from big name "quality" manufactures. I run a Wilson Combat 14lb spring in my 92a1. The weight rating of the spring doesn't directly correlate to trigger pull weight.

If it’s a nightstand gun that doesn’t get carried, you could get away with a light spring and a crisp pull as long as you make sure all the firing mechanisms parts are in fresh shape, cleaned and lubed before enough debris ever accumulate to cause a malfunction.Ī factory spring is a 20lb spring. Lighter springs mean that the trigger pulls are crisper, but the gun is less tolerant for debris and lack of maintenance. Heavy springs mean that trigger pulls are heavier, but will always strike even if the gun is dirty and the mechanisms have debris in it that would otherwise prevent a strike.

It’s always a compromise between reliability and trigger pull weight. They are all very cheap, I think $8, so I would buy a bunch and experiment to see which spring is reliable for the state of your gun.
Buy beretta d spring series#
LTT sells hammer springs in all weights for the 92 series except for 15, apparently because it has almost no difference from the 16 pound spring. The D spring is a 16 pound weight spring.
