Is the larue a good compromise trigger for both longer range precision shots as well as more up close rapid fire? Is the larue comparable to the geissele ssa-e? Or would the geissele ssa-e be the better way to go for that type of overall performance?
Geissele ssa-e, light pull for combat, cqb, hd you would want to be well trained under stress don't want to blow away someone you didn't mean to blow away.
This video has no organization to it maybe show us the break then the reset then the pull weight in order doing all the triggers that way then doing non geissele last it’s hard to know what’s even going on
I will say right now, the SSP is not a single stage. It's a two stage that is engineered to be as close to the feel of a single stage as possible; the take up is imperceptible, but you can pull it slow and light enough to hit the wall. I'd personally like to get a much stronger trigger spring to give it a stiffer feel than how it comes from Geissele.
Why does the packing of the SSP say “Single Stage Precision” if it isn’t a single stage? And why would Geissele refer to it as their companies first true “single stage” trigger for the AR platform?
You can take that one up with Uncle Bill. I have not heard that one. Take a look at the video of the SSP. I am open to learning, but I am seeing 1 stage
@@CharliesCustomClones Like I said, if it can be pulled slow and light enough, it can be done. The take up is imperceptible in most real world cases. You can find a short video demonstrating it (which was difficult to do one handed) by going to imgur and pasting this to the end: /a/MSIxa0p My SSP trigger has 052121-08 2H2101 on the trigger, and 062121-04/19517 on the hammer. Geissele did showcase a true single stage trigger at SHOT Show 2017, called the Super Speed Precision. That one didn't get the greenlight for production, the Single Stage Precision took it's place.
If this were true they would be hit for false advertisement. Even on their website they state single stage. If you’re talking about pre-travel than that itself is not indicative of it being or not being single stage, but more on fitting tolerances based on the lower, possible user installment error, or production error. If you have proof showing that this is actually the case then post your source to show some sort of validity to your claims.
Glad i found this. It seems like the “no bullshit” part of trigger comparisons is the lost art that resurfaced in this video.
Wonder why 3 out of 3 triggers didn’t come with go juice? They move away from this?
Is the larue a good compromise trigger for both longer range precision shots as well as more up close rapid fire? Is the larue comparable to the geissele ssa-e? Or would the geissele ssa-e be the better way to go for that type of overall performance?
Geissele ssa-e, light pull for combat, cqb, hd you would want to be well trained under stress don't want to blow away someone you didn't mean to blow away.
I have the SD SSP and I love it Fast as lightning ⚡️ 😂❤
i like Geissele 3 gun trigger 🇺🇸👍
I have 2 SSP on my on a sweet 16 and a piston driven SR556 and they are Faaaaaaast
This video has no organization to it maybe show us the break then the reset then the pull weight in order doing all the triggers that way then doing non geissele last it’s hard to know what’s even going on
I will say right now, the SSP is not a single stage. It's a two stage that is engineered to be as close to the feel of a single stage as possible; the take up is imperceptible, but you can pull it slow and light enough to hit the wall. I'd personally like to get a much stronger trigger spring to give it a stiffer feel than how it comes from Geissele.
Why does the packing of the SSP say “Single Stage Precision” if it isn’t a single stage? And why would Geissele refer to it as their companies first true “single stage” trigger for the AR platform?
@@stephen_crumley One word: marketing.
You can take that one up with Uncle Bill. I have not heard that one. Take a look at the video of the SSP. I am open to learning, but I am seeing 1 stage
@@CharliesCustomClones Like I said, if it can be pulled slow and light enough, it can be done. The take up is imperceptible in most real world cases. You can find a short video demonstrating it (which was difficult to do one handed) by going to imgur and pasting this to the end: /a/MSIxa0p
My SSP trigger has 052121-08 2H2101 on the trigger, and 062121-04/19517 on the hammer.
Geissele did showcase a true single stage trigger at SHOT Show 2017, called the Super Speed Precision. That one didn't get the greenlight for production, the Single Stage Precision took it's place.
If this were true they would be hit for false advertisement. Even on their website they state single stage. If you’re talking about pre-travel than that itself is not indicative of it being or not being single stage, but more on fitting tolerances based on the lower, possible user installment error, or production error. If you have proof showing that this is actually the case then post your source to show some sort of validity to your claims.