When it comes to suicide, I don't believe in "shoulds." No one should be telling you what you should or shouldn't do. They don't know your pain, and they are very unlikely to understand it if they did know.
Remember that pain is temporary, death is not. Many call suicide a permanent solution to a temporary problem.
Just remember that you don't have to make a choice right now. Think about it. Wait a few days, give it some time. Try some new things. What have you got to lose? Nothing that isn't fixable. But on the other hand if you commit suicide you have everything to lose and once it's done, it isn't fixable.
Pull the trigger.
Length of pull is that distance from trigger to end of stock butt. Most generally, rifle and shotgun stocks are provided with 13 3/4" from the factory, as this is felt to be the average length of the average adult male's requirement for comfortable grasp of the firearm and for trigger manipulation.
Right Trigger
Trigger point massage and myotherapy are similar to neuromuscular massage.
A 3-round burst is considered a form of automatic fire, but it's distinct from fully automatic fire. In a 3-round burst system, the firearm fires three rounds with a single pull of the trigger, then requires a release and pull to fire again. This mechanism allows for controlled bursts of fire while limiting the number of rounds fired at once, making it different from continuous fire in fully automatic weapons.
The trigger pull should only be adjusted by a trained gunsmith. Browning does not publish trigger pull weights.
The military weapon, AR-15, should have a trigger pull of 5.5 to 8.5 pounds and should be free of creep. Creep is the rough movement between the trigger pull and hammer release.
You pull down the trigger on the side of the toilet and it should disappear.
4 lbs
It is supposed to.
I have a remingon 37 field service manual weight of the trigger pull may be changed by turning trigger pull adjusting screw to the right , or clockwise for heaver pull off ,and to the left ,or counter clockwise for lighter pull off . adjust trigger adjusting screw rear until lengthwise lap of sear and bolt stop is about .012 " ( gun cocked safe is off ) turn trigger adjusting front screw front in as far as it will go ,then back off until trigger will fire . now back out trigger pull adjusting screw until it is free of trigger spring weight trigger pull . pull should be under 3 lbs. turn in screw until desired pull is obtained . kansasroadrunner@embarqmail.com 03-14-2008
When a loaded firearm fails in an attempt to be fired. When you pull the trigger, it does not fire when it should.
Pull and hold the trigger, then pull the bolt back and it should release.
one trigger sets the gun to go off and the other fires it you must squeeze the first trigger then the second to fire the gun and if your not careful and pull the set trigger again instead of the second trigger the gun will not fire plus the second trigger being the fire trigger is usually a hair trigger meaning you barely have to pull it to make the gun fire
never mind i got it....i had to pull the slide forward and when the trigger went into firing position you pull the trigger while continuing to pull forward...i was scared as hell for a minute
"go to DIP and buy a target trigger for around $30" I take it from that statement you don't own the DIP trigger. I do, it's been on my 60 for over a year, it does not reduce trigger pull. It's a great rigger, I like the straight profile over the curved Marlin trigger and the adjustment for trigger pre-travel, but it doesn't reduce trigger pull. This has been confirmed by several DIP trigger owners and my Lymann digital trigger pull gauge. There is no simple fix for reducing trigger pull on a Marlin semi-auto. The action has to be taken apart and have parts replaced or modified to reduce pull weight. For anyone really interested in reducing pull on the Marlin 60, 795 or other variant of the Marlin semi-auto, you should log on to Rimfire Central forums and read the information provided in the stickies of the Marlin sub-forums.
Load, pump, pull trigger. Pump, pull trigger. Continue until all ammumition is fired. Load, pump, pull trigger, etc..