Just got back from an unfortunately quick range trip. Third Atrius Selektor broke on me, less than 100 rounds. I'm pretty confident I'm breaking them because I'm pulling the trigger to strongly to the rear, and the gun/action is set up with more than enough gas. Stuck between a rock and a hard place, lots of action/reciprocating energy, and my pinning the trigger to the rear, the levers are giving out. I was trying to do some quantitative studies of forced reset strings of fire accuracy/time as compared to semi auto strings of fire, and in doing so I found myself strongly gripping the gun, and trigger as well. I think this is what has broken my last two Atrius levers. I don't know for sure, but I imagine harder steel perhaps tool steel, and an improved lever design with additional structural integrity could solve the issue. I'm curious about buying a Raregreed FRT15L3 now in hopes that the cassette style design has more mechanical advantage over the trigger finger, as well as less stress induced to the mechanism and or a different design geometrically/metallurgically such that breakages are less likely to happen.
>>64100949
Have you tried forcibly pinning the trigger to the rear and seeing how it functions under lots of trigger finger pressure? Have you inspected the mechanism of the RBT FRT and can you speak to any comparison to "long" lever type super safeties like traditional SS, Atrius, or ARC-Fire?
I ask because I've now snapped my third Atrius lever, and the most recent two to break I'm pretty sure I broke by combing a strongly gassed gun with H3 buffer with my cranking down and holding the trigger to the rear. The action tries to force the reset but I'm holding the trigger strongly enough that the Atrius lever just gives out instead.
Do you think the Rarebreed FRT would do a better job of working with a strongly held to the rear trigger?
>>64103410
>>64100949
How quick did y'all get order confirmation, tracking numbers, then receive your RBT FRT15L3?