Just found this out today. I am grieving. I love these triggers as they polish, vent and shape very well for my purposes.
Whilst ordering another few dozen I got the news. And I had to ask if these means forever. And I heard the dreaded words "Pretty much".
These were stamped / pressed... then worked additionally at the end of the curve (as I see variation in that area only from trigger to trigger).
All I can say is: Some 3/16" brass flat stock will be ordered. I will not be denied the precious. :D
I know they have not been on production guns for a year or more but surprised that Crosman had that much stock in reserve or more likely, left over. Seeing the brass trigger was always a sure sign of an older gun.
It was and still is a great trigger and will be sorely missed. :(
Carl
crosman has a lot of old obsolete parts laying around that most of the time they don't even know they have
a bunch of as2250 parts were bought not long ago actually around the time this thread was posted
i bought enough parts to build an as2250 at half the cost of a new one but i sold the parts and made a nice profit after reading all the problems with sealing these guns have
I still want an AS2250XT :-*
Someday!
had i known that i would have posted the parts here you know on the yellow or aa classifieds hard to get parts goi in minutes. i had everything except the valve but i was going to use a bna boss as valve
i might still be able to the parts except the bottle adapter which can be bought @ crosmods and the valve which bna has and you can mod you own stock
i'll look into that tomorrow
So true. I worked at Crosman when those triggers went by by :( Now they are stamped steanless steal triggers.
There is a funny story behind that (stamping triggers), but unless you worked there, ya wouldn't know what the joke is/was.
I only three of them left they came out of guns that i did mods to or changed the trigger frame.
Mike
I have 3. Thank you Davio. One is in my 1377 phase II I'm working on right now. Look close and you will see it shine and a Davio brass safety and a Davio trigger shoe. :-\. :-\ :-\
The new trigger does feel pretty nice. The worst was back in the late 70s when they tried plastic.
This gun was made in Sept. 96 and it had a plastic trigger in it. That is why I changed it. ;)
You would think someone would make/sell a similar CNC copy of it.
Edit: Heck, even something close but with a wider machined-in shoe.
Quote from: Tater on August 13, 2014, 05:30:21 AM
You would think someone would make/sell a similar CNC copy of it.
Edit: Heck, even something close but with a wider machined-in shoe.
This is a much better copy sir :-*
http://www.ebay.com/itm/SWEET-Solid-Brass-Roller-Trigger-Reduced-Friction-Crosman-2240-2300-1322-etc-/291104967370?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item43c7354aca (http://www.ebay.com/itm/SWEET-Solid-Brass-Roller-Trigger-Reduced-Friction-Crosman-2240-2300-1322-etc-/291104967370?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item43c7354aca)
There is also 1 in ss..
That roller trigger on ebay, that's our Davio. ;) ;)
That roller trigger looks awesome, unfortunately not in my budget right now.
Quote from: punchpressqueen75 on October 23, 2013, 02:11:34 PM
So true. I worked at Crosman when those triggers went by by :( Now they are stamped steanless steal triggers.
There is a funny story behind that (stamping triggers), but unless you worked there, ya wouldn't know what the joke is/was.
I didn't know that crosman had made stainless triggers ? when was that ?
One less item that eBay sellers can charge triple for.
Quote from: crossliner on August 13, 2014, 01:25:48 PM
This is a much better copy sir :-*
http://www.ebay.com/itm/SWEET-Solid-Brass-Roller-Trigger-Reduced-Friction-Crosman-2240-2300-1322-etc-/291104967370?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item43c7354aca (http://www.ebay.com/itm/SWEET-Solid-Brass-Roller-Trigger-Reduced-Friction-Crosman-2240-2300-1322-etc-/291104967370?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item43c7354aca)
There is also 1 in ss..
Looks like a copy of Grant Stace's trigger.
Quote from: Iagent on August 19, 2014, 04:31:16 AM
Looks like a copy of Grant Stace's trigger.
You are either kidding... or you are blind ! Other than the fact that they are triggers and they are brass, they are
most dissimilar. One is a refined blend of design work and fine automated machinery. The other is not.
The shape and finish is even different. I would bet that not one single specification is the same other than pin diameter, etc. And one has far less ego blatantly defacing its simple elegance. I raise the BS flag on that statement. Let's compare them?
I personally like the brass and ss pair better..
I'd love to have any of them. :)
Quote from: Davio on August 19, 2014, 05:28:26 AM
You are either kidding... or you are blind ! Other than the fact that they are triggers and they are brass, they are most dissimilar. One is a refined blend of design work and fine automated machinery. The other is not.
The shape and finish is even different. I would bet that not one single specification is the same other than pin diameter, etc. And one has far less ego blatantly defacing its simple elegance. I raise the BS flag on that statement. Let's compare them?
Explain these triggers. Who is Grant and who's triggers are on the eBay link? The ones on eBay look great to me, if there's a better one lets see it. Every time you guys post stuff like this my wallet gets thinner.
The triggers you see on the ebay link are from our Davio here on the forum. If you are interested in buying them, just give Davio a PM and he will give you all the info. ;)
looks like a copy of Don's trigger, a take off of Grant's, which is take off of Chevelle's,which is a take off of some elses and so on. not kidding and not blind
Quote from: Davio on August 19, 2014, 05:28:26 AMYou are either kidding... or you are blind ! Other than the fact that they are triggers and they are brass, they are most dissimilar. One is a refined blend of design work and fine automated machinery. The other is not. Grant is a tool maker and everything he does is by hand, not some fancy automated machinery ,where is your skill? ....... granted Grant can be a _____ but again, where is your skill? The shape and finish is even different. I would bet that not one single specification is the same other than pin diameter, etc. And one has far less ego (really) blatantly defacing its simple elegance. I raise the BS flag on that statement. Let's compare them? [/q] |
Eric adds some good points on the looonnnng history of "2240 Triggers" to this thread, it's been a hot topic for years and years. Some might even call that historical period the "Stace Wars".
IMO, Dave's parts are very refined in the machining and surface processing and yes, the basic geometry of all 2240/13XX triggers HAS to be the same or it won't work (distance and center-line of pin to sear contact point, etc etc). So to my eyes, that explains the similarity in basic shape and also where the similarity ends.
Speaking of triggers. This guy did a pretty job explaining and showing the process of where and why to polish...
Quote from: eric on August 20, 2014, 12:08:09 PM
looks like a copy of Don's trigger, a take off of Grant's, which is take off of Chevelle's,which is a take off of some elses and so on. not kidding and not blind
If you go back to the first statement that the trigger "Looks like a copy of Grant Stace's trigger"...
then my reply back to that statement that it clearly is "most dissimilar" (not a copy)... with pictures to support the observations... and yes equating ego with the stamping of one's name on parts (a particular personal peeve of mine because if all parts makers were egomaniacs as such, then a gun with a mix of parts would look like a Nascar with all the different branding all over it).
Now, eric my clown friend... my reply to your reply to my reply to someone else...
1. Why in the HELL would my great friend Don Cothran have to copy his own uniquely designed trigger? (you have a good eye, but are still wrong) ;) Don is a machinist and (as others do) he makes various parts for me (some are my design and some are his). You know his work and products as mainly stainless air gun parts. He makes my parts in stainless or brass depending on what I want. He is a MACHINIST that has airguns as a hobby, but his hands are not tied and he is capable of about anything. He has been making some motorcycle parts lately, because he is a machinist. You want a few dozen of a new air gun part? Draw it and send it to him. Want just one or two of something he does not make? LMAO!
2. As someone that knows both sides of the old school versus automation fence, let me tell you that design is a skill that is required to either method. Deciding shapes and dimensions, thicknesses, tolerance, mechanical aspects, materials, finish, etc. is a true blend of art and mechanical engineering that is required regardless of machinery and method used to accomplish it. THEN, if one is fortunate enough to know how to be a machinist to make a prototype... like it... and then have the additional good fortune to know how to recipe the moves and steps into gcode that will follow their design commands on their CNC machinery... then THAT person is more skilled than the one on the manual lathe and mill (not on the lathe and mill, but overall). Individual skill levels being the same, the skill set required is MORE ROBUST! Further, that part will be the same over and over and over with same or better tolerances and variation than the manually made and duplicated part. And I find that those who are good are busy... those that are very busy use efficient equipment to increase output and maintain high precision. These folks usually have much less time to terrorize those that disagree with their opinions.
Quote from: Davio on August 21, 2014, 08:18:59 PM
If you go back to the first statement that the trigger "Looks like a copy of Grant Stace's trigger"...
then my reply back to that statement that it clearly is "most dissimilar" (not a copy)... with pictures to support the observations... and yes equating ego with the stamping of one's name on parts (a particular personal peeve of mine because if all parts makers were egomaniacs as such, then a gun with a mix of parts would look like a Nascar with all the different branding all over it).
Now, eric my clown friend... my reply to your reply to my reply to someone else...
1. Why in the HELL would my great friend Don Cothran have to copy his own uniquely designed trigger? (you have a good eye, but are still wrong) ;) Don is a machinist and (as others do) he makes various parts for me (some are my design and some are his). You know his work and products as mainly stainless air gun parts. He makes my parts in stainless or brass depending on what I want. He is a MACHINIST that has airguns as a hobby, but his hands are not tied and he is capable of about anything. He has been making some motorcycle parts lately, because he is a machinist. You want a few dozen of a new air gun part? Draw it and send it to him. Want just one or two of something he does not make? LMAO!
2. As someone that knows both sides of the old school versus automation fence, let me tell you that design is a skill that is required to either method. Deciding shapes and dimensions, thicknesses, tolerance, mechanical aspects, materials, finish, etc. is a true blend of art and mechanical engineering that is required regardless of machinery and method used to accomplish it. THEN, if one is fortunate enough to know how to be a machinist to make a prototype... like it... and then have the additional good fortune to know how to recipe the moves and steps into gcode that will follow their design commands on their CNC machinery... then THAT person is more skilled than the one on the manual lathe and mill (not on the lathe and mill, but overall). Individual skill levels being the same, the skill set required is MORE ROBUST! Further, that part will be the same over and over and over with same or better tolerances and variation than the manually made and duplicated part. And I find that those who are good are busy... those that are very busy use efficient equipment to increase output and maintain high precision. These folks rarely have much less time to terrorize those that disagree with their opinions.
:D
This is why I stay out of trigger drama....
I mod the stock trigger, have a ball bearing like contact surface between the trigger and sear, shorten the sear a little and over compress the trigger spring . Nice trigger, no fuss, no drama.
Quote from: Davio on August 21, 2014, 08:18:59 PM
If you go back to the first statement that the trigger "Looks like a copy of Grant Stace's trigger"...
then my reply back to that statement that it clearly is "most dissimilar" (not a copy)... with pictures to support the observations... and yes equating ego with the stamping of one's name on parts (a particular personal peeve of mine because if all parts makers were egomaniacs as such, then a gun with a mix of parts would look like a Nascar with all the different branding all over it).
Now, eric my clown friend... my reply to your reply to my reply to someone else...
1. Why in the HELL would my great friend Don Cothran have to copy his own uniquely designed trigger? (you have a good eye, but are still wrong) ;) Don is a machinist and (as others do) he makes various parts for me (some are my design and some are his). You know his work and products as mainly stainless air gun parts. He makes my parts in stainless or brass depending on what I want. He is a MACHINIST that has airguns as a hobby, but his hands are not tied and he is capable of about anything. He has been making some motorcycle parts lately, because he is a machinist. You want a few dozen of a new air gun part? Draw it and send it to him. Want just one or two of something he does not make? LMAO!
2. As someone that knows both sides of the old school versus automation fence, let me tell you that design is a skill that is required to either method. Deciding shapes and dimensions, thicknesses, tolerance, mechanical aspects, materials, finish, etc. is a true blend of art and mechanical engineering that is required regardless of machinery and method used to accomplish it. THEN, if one is fortunate enough to know how to be a machinist to make a prototype... like it... and then have the additional good fortune to know how to recipe the moves and steps into gcode that will follow their design commands on their CNC machinery... then THAT person is more skilled than the one on the manual lathe and mill (not on the lathe and mill, but overall). Individual skill levels being the same, the skill set required is MORE ROBUST! Further, that part will be the same over and over and over with same or better tolerances and variation than the manually made and duplicated part. And I find that those who are good are busy... those that are very busy use efficient equipment to increase output and maintain high precision. These folks usually have much less time to terrorize those that disagree with their opinions.
I don't care I still like the brass and ss pair better lol! In my eyes they are PERFECT and I don't care if they are copies or whatever!
Hey Guys... Grant called >:( and wants to join in on this thread :D ;D
C'mon now... they are just airgun triggers, Colt25 got it nailed, I do the same.
IMO, the aftermarket triggers are for those who can't, or won't DIY. I have both types and my Lyman scale can't detect a difference, nor can my trigger finger. The limiting factor is the 22XX frame geometry and single stage design, next big trigger improvement is the P-Rod frame exchange method.
Still, the DC, Davio and even Mr. Stace designs are nice pieces of work :-*
I'll vote for Davio. :)
Me too! QUACK,QUACK,QUACK!!! :-\ :-*
One part of my 2400 KT I really am not happy with. It's like "wiggle" or something, too much side to side. Can't do it this month, fun money goes on rocket motor parts this month but next... ;)
8) :) to it all ..............
Hi guys, I got one of these... What does "coined" stands for?
They have been machine pressed??
Quote from: Sathiel on December 12, 2014, 06:31:03 PM
Hi guys, I got one of these... What does "coined" stands for?
They have been machine pressed??
Yes, pressed die... like making coins.
Quote from: Rex Havoc on September 30, 2014, 03:24:11 PM
One part of my 2400 KT I really am not happy with. It's like "wiggle" or something, too much side to side. Can't do it this month, fun money goes on rocket motor parts this month but next... ;)
you can make little washers to put on the side to reduce the wiggle . i made some from a very thin and cheap tupperware wanna be lid . helps a lot .
Quote from: Davio on December 13, 2014, 03:40:01 AM
Yes, pressed die... like making coins.
Aren't they all made this way anyway?
Any difference if not?