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Posted: Wed Feb 20, 2013 10:19 am
by Houngan
Interesting. Does anyone know the breakdown of electronic vs. mechanical at the top level?
Posted: Wed Feb 20, 2013 7:36 pm
by flolo
One more thing to consider: steyr's coming out with a new electronic trigger this year( from what i heard, in summer), which, as the morini trigger, will have an opening switch instead of the closing. So maybe there's a difference...
Posted: Thu Feb 21, 2013 5:57 am
by ghostrip
flolo in the morini design the trigger pushes the microswith to close. it is not an opening switch circuit. in fact even with the electronics in the off position you can feel the click of the microswitch if you pull slow enough.
On the other hand in my matchguns mg1e the design is of an opening contact and when electronics are off you cant tell where the disengage happens. i dont own a steyr gun but i think it is the same (opening).
Posted: Thu Feb 21, 2013 6:04 am
by LukeP
with steyr you feel with the board off the switch as morini.
Posted: Thu Feb 21, 2013 6:09 am
by ghostrip
thanks luke. wish i had an lp10e to dismantle and play with :P
Posted: Thu Feb 21, 2013 9:30 am
by jipe
Look at this test of Visier
http://www.feinwerkbau.de/ceasy/modules ... download=1 it contains diagrams of the trigger weight vs. trigger position for several pistols including the LP10E.
The difference between the LP10E and mechanical triggers is obvious.
The only stupid thing is that they didn't include the Morini 162ie, which is a kind of reference for electronic trigger, in the test ! May be it is in another Visier test ?
Posted: Thu Feb 21, 2013 2:17 pm
by David M
The Morini has two different circuit/switch designs.
The early one with the 15v battery is break circuit same as the free pistol. The later AAA battery is make circuit.
The early circuit had a greater range of travel for the second stage to set up a roll off trigger and less micro switch spring feel.
Posted: Thu Feb 21, 2013 5:54 pm
by flolo
@ghostrip : according to francesco the switch is opening, so i'll trust him on this as i think he knows what he's building. Steyr is the other way round and they change this. Maybe they constructed it initially this way for the lp5/50...
Posted: Thu Feb 21, 2013 6:15 pm
by j-team
I had heard or read (maybe on this forum) that Steyr, Morini and Pardini all use exactly the same micro switch for their electronic triggers.
Can anyone confirm or deny this?
Posted: Fri Feb 22, 2013 12:42 am
by Tycho
Definitely not true, I've got at least one of each, and there are almost no similarities at all, and certainly not in the switch. We even took apart a Pardini trigger some years back to replace the microswitch, so I'd know what it looks like, and it's not the same thing I'm seeing in the Morini and the Steyr. Wouldn't matter if it did, though, as the switch itself is not important (as long as it works).
The Morini trigger (15V) definitely releases on opening, which is why you can shoot the Morini without a trigger stop and just pull through forever. In a Pardini, you'll break the switch from the board doing that. The Steyr e-trigger is cheap trash, it's a miracle that it works as good as it does, and no wonder that the LP50e got pulled from the market as fast as it was. My 50e works pretty well, but come on - a plastic frame??
Posted: Fri Feb 22, 2013 1:56 am
by flolo
This, the different balance (new main housing, at least on the lp10e) and the way to fix the grip...
And, wasn' t the 2x1,5 AA board from morini sold as direct replacement for the older 15v? So the switches should work the same. Pressing a switch in doesn't necessarily mean it's closing.