>>64105839
>These triggers are just one big compromise and the compromise is that you can't death grip.
Yeah but in the spirit of SHALL NOT we should try to get these devices as close as possible to the least compromised state that we can
>The only way to overcome this is to somehow make the SS turn with such force that no human can squeeze hard enough. But that only creates more potential problems.
I'm buggin Atrius right now explaining as much. We absolutely want to use as much leverage and mechanical advantage to force the reset as possible, making it harder for a strong trigger finger in a death grip situation to lock the gun up and prevent cycling, BUT as you pointed out this can lead to other potential problems, like said increase in mechanical advantage and leverage breaking the levers/parts that are part of the mechanism. So we need to beef up the lever design and material such that it can reliably and with longevity actuate the forced reset with the mechanical advantage afforded by the geometry.

A great analogy IMO is with drag racing. We can add engine power (gas, mass, reciprocating energy), and we can increase the final gear ratio for better acceleration (forced reset mechanism mechanical advantage over the trigger finger), but if the axles aren't beefed up properly (lever strength), they'll just snap.