• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

Stiff hammer Euroarms Rogers and Spencer

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Jonah Hex

32 Cal
Joined
Jul 17, 2021
Messages
13
Reaction score
1
Hi all,
I acquired an engraved Euroarms Rogers and Spencer. The trigger pull is crisp and acceptably light, but the hammer pull is very stiff. Does anyone have advice to lighten the hammer?
 
Hi all,
I acquired an engraved Euroarms Rogers and Spencer. The trigger pull is crisp and acceptably light, but the hammer pull is very stiff. Does anyone have advice to lighten the hammer?

The "acceptably light" trigger pull will get closer to "dangerously light" the lighter you make the mainspring . . . which is how you lighten the hammer pull. You'll end up having to address the trigger pull as well. Trigger sear engagement is more important than trigger spring weight.

Mike
 
Lightening the main spring to make the pistol easier to **** will also make the pistol less reliable. The design of this and the Remington are always stiffer than a Colt. The spring isn’t that much beefier but the way it feels makes it seem less easy to cycle the action. If you thin the spring much have a spare new one in hand to get the pistol shooting again.
 
I have replaced springs before and it never made the gun unsafe. You have to have the hammer strike hard enough to bust caps. In my experience unsafe triggers have more to do with worn out sears and sear springs.
But if the hammer draw is too stiff, coupled with the odd shape of the Rogers grip you have a hammer that is likely to slip during cocking. I feel that's more unsafe than anything else.
 
Funny how folks view the Italian copies as "all" of them being like "theirs" . . . If yours has a great trigger . . . they all have a great trigger. If yours has a heavy hammer . . . they all have heavy hammers. Nothing could be further from the truth!!
Trigger pull weight is a combination of the sear engagement angle, main spring weight and trigger spring weight . . . in that order. That's how you can have a 3lb hammer draw AND a 3lb trigger pull . . . even if the hammer starts out at 8lbs with a "hair" trigger.
Therefore, changing the main spring to a lighter draw weight can easily make a dangerously light trigger, depending on the sear angle of engagement.

Likewise, a lighter main isn't necessarily the reason for "light strikes" otherwise, how could you have 4lb hammer draws with 100 % reliability ? The MAIN reason for light hits is bolt arm tension along with high cam height.

Mike
 
Hi all,
I acquired an engraved Euroarms Rogers and Spencer. The trigger pull is crisp and acceptably light, but the hammer pull is very stiff. Does anyone have advice to lighten the hammer?
I don't, but my R&S is awkward to ****; due to design, can't single-handedly **** & fire like a 873 SSA. That's ok, it's a great repro! Good luck!
 
I don't, but my R&S is awkward to ****; due to design, can't single-handedly **** & fire like a 873 SSA. That's ok, it's a great repro! Good luck!
I think the way too high hammer spur is part of the problem. I am thinking of reworking the spur on mine at some point to make it a bit lower and easier get to. The nice thing is the hammer stroke is much shorter than most revolvers.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top