Figured I'd put one more gun photo up, since people seemed to enjoy the last one. I won't saturate my page with em though, no worries^^
I've had quite a few over the years, and have come to appreciate the P2000 as the one for me. There have been some I've shot better, but maybe none I've clicked with as well. It's a 2005 manufacture. I'm not the original owner, but bought it off a retired US Postal Inspector, who had it issued to him then bought it when he retired. I've put about 2,500 rounds through it myself, he put about the same. Been completely reliable. This pistol has HK's "LEM" trigger system on it, which while I thought was strange at first, I have completely fallen in love it.
I fitted it with the magazine release from a HK45, which has a much larger purchase area, and fits in perfectly. Also put a Streamlight TLR-3 on it.
Anyway, enjoy :3
I've had quite a few over the years, and have come to appreciate the P2000 as the one for me. There have been some I've shot better, but maybe none I've clicked with as well. It's a 2005 manufacture. I'm not the original owner, but bought it off a retired US Postal Inspector, who had it issued to him then bought it when he retired. I've put about 2,500 rounds through it myself, he put about the same. Been completely reliable. This pistol has HK's "LEM" trigger system on it, which while I thought was strange at first, I have completely fallen in love it.
I fitted it with the magazine release from a HK45, which has a much larger purchase area, and fits in perfectly. Also put a Streamlight TLR-3 on it.
Anyway, enjoy :3
Category Photography / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1280 x 960px
File Size 330.8 kB
It's.. hm. I'll just copy and paste from http://pistol-training.com/articles.....lem-vs-sig-dak
The HK LEM is basically artifice. It uses a two-piece hammer, one part internal and one part external. When the slide is racked (loading the gun or during the firing cycle), the mainspring is compressed and kept in place as with any single action mechanism. However, the external part of the hammer moves fully forward and so does the trigger. In essence you have a cocked pistol that doesn’t look cocked.
The first shot is long like a traditional double action pull, but it’s not any heavier than subsequent trigger pulls. The reset is certainly longer than most striker-fired guns or a 1911, but it’s only about a third of the total trigger travel arc.
The HK LEM is basically artifice. It uses a two-piece hammer, one part internal and one part external. When the slide is racked (loading the gun or during the firing cycle), the mainspring is compressed and kept in place as with any single action mechanism. However, the external part of the hammer moves fully forward and so does the trigger. In essence you have a cocked pistol that doesn’t look cocked.
The first shot is long like a traditional double action pull, but it’s not any heavier than subsequent trigger pulls. The reset is certainly longer than most striker-fired guns or a 1911, but it’s only about a third of the total trigger travel arc.
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