Miss fire.

Uh, isn’t that how the Accu Trigger is supposed to work? That is, it shouldn’t fire unless you depress the center blade first (as you squeeze) and then execute the shot? I’ve got an Axis II and a 220 and seems that I remember reading in the owners manual that this is an added safety feature of the Accu Trigger.

Incorrect. You are mistaken the AccuTrigger for Glock Safe Action type trigger. The AccuTrigger can and does engage without the center blade being fully depressed and in doing so results in light primer strikes and uncocking. If you try pulling a Glock trigger without depressing the center blade safety it will not move. The video does not really illustrate this and the narrator incorrectly identifies the center blade as a safety which it is not by my definition but perhaps you could say it is since a light primer strike doesn’t result in the gun firing 🤔.
 
Uh, isn’t that how the Accu Trigger is supposed to work? That is, it shouldn’t fire unless you depress the center blade first (as you squeeze) and then execute the shot? I’ve got an Axis II and a 220 and seems that I remember reading in the owners manual that this is an added safety feature of the Accu Trigger.

That’s what I thought too but I tested it yesterday after the misfire. It will absolutely fire without touching the center part at all but like I said it doesn’t sound right at all. It’s more of a thud than a snap when the firing pin goes off. Wednesday I’m going on a doe thinning mission at my dads and I’m going to try the same shell that didn’t fire.
 
Here’s what the owners manual states. Maybe I’m misunderstanding. Wouldn’t be the first time :)

View attachment 350536
We’ll look at that, this describes exactly what I was trying to explain. This is all correct except light primer strikes do happen with them so the firing pin must be moving slightly. With a Glock the trigger doesn’t move and there is no “click” it either goes bang or doesn’t go bang.

Terrible design by Savage IMO. I’m all for improving trigger pull but in a hunting situation the gun has to go off when the trigger is pulled, regardless of how “well” or “correct” it is pulled.
 
If your trigger pull is perfect and straight back, no issue. With gloves on and in a hunting situation sometimes your finger, especially when gloved, will be at a slight angle on the trigger, as you are pulling back the tip of your finger, angled away from trigger, fails to fully depress the trigger blade and the part of your fingertip further toward you hand pulls the trigger and - misfire.

Hard to picture how it'd be a problem for a person using the pad of their finger rather than wrapping it around the trigger like an orangutan? Edit to add: or if you side load the blade a bit does it push against the actual trigger shoe and not slip through even if the pad of your finger is pretty flush with the face of the trigger?
 
Last edited:
Just tested your theory and there is no doubt in my mind that’s what happened. It sounds completely different when the trigger is pulled without the center part pulled also. Will definitely have to keep this in mind in the future. Thanks a bunch!
I had the same thing happen on a Mossberg I owned with the lightning trigger. It found it's way gone real quickly. I knew what would happen in the moment when needed in the woods.
 
Back
Top