Wheeler Fine Gunsmith Equipment Professional Digital Trigger Gauge
$93.91
The Wheeler Professional Digital Trigger Gauge makes measuring the trigger pulls of your weapon and easy and efficient task. The gauge measures trigger pulls in pounds or kilograms and records the MAX and MIN trigger pull as well as the number of trigger pulls within session. Provides +/- .1 oz. accuracy with a load sensor directly contacting the trigger and a 0-12 lbs. range. Offers and ergonomic over molded design and soft touch buttons for easy handling. The arm folds inside the housing to protect the load sensor when not in use. Specifications for Wheeler Fine Gunsmith Equipment Professional Digital Trigger Gauge: Manufacturer: Wheeler Engineering Color: Black/Yellow Condition: New Features of Wheeler Fine Gunsmith Equipment Professional Digital Trigger Gauge: Ergonomic over molded design 0-12 lbs range Load sensor directly contacts the trigger Audible indicator tone Low battery indicator Arm folds inside housing for protection Foam lined storage case included Package Contents: Wheeler Fine Gunsmith Equipment Professional Digital Trigger Gauge The Caldwell Wheeler Professional Digital Trigger Gauge 710904 is a quality addition to the Wheeler Engineering lineup. For more great deals on Gunsmithing Tools by Wheeler Engineering, please browse our Wheeler Fine Gunsmith Equipment Gunsmithing Equipment page.
Gary Cater –
I am very satisfied with the performance of Wheeler trigger gauge. I read and followed the instructions and tested the pull weight of my precision rifle and the product worked just as it should. I would recommend this product. G.C.
tgiv –
Never would have thought to buy this until my 6.5 year old Glock began acting up (now 7 years old and just returned from factory to fix light strikes on Fiocchi FMJ 40S&W). The factory likes only their parts. I don't like their trigger pull. When reinstalling the various spring combinations to get the right feel, this tool was enlightening & helpful.After this learning curve was mastered, was tempted to pull out all the other guns and record them as well. At first a daunting task, this became fun as each test result "sorted" its "pull" with the others, always making sense the feel was in the same order as proven digitally … now for the first time, by how much.Past measuring devices employed in sports or business have shown me to pony up the extra money to elect digital over analog springs … many times I had to pay extra postage and experience delivery delays when not digital. Gone are the days of sliderules and of course in this case, I wanted precise numbers to assure me best data.Saw a video trying to employ a postage scale to avoid this purchase but after one or two "pulls" it seems exhausting and not for my purpose.
Chris –
Saw other review that warned of this trigger gauge of having issues. It has alot of cool features that will calculate averages and such. None of these built in features work on my device. I will measure and hold the highest pull wt only in Lbs&oz. I would prefer just one or the other of any unit. It may be the standard for measuring trigger pull, but seems overly complicated doing a combination of units without any adjustment. It does what I need it to do, but would much prefer it work as intended.
Jonathan C –
The overall functionality, ambidextrous product design and accuracy is desirable; however, the finish of the clear acrylic plastic display isn't as professional as it should be. Lots of micro-scratches makes the product appear used. And there is no protective film like most of us would expect to find as in many other consumer electronic products.
Dave –
Received the Wheeler Pro trigger gauge soon after ordering it online. It arrived packaged well without any damage. After unpackaging it I reviewed the owner manual (foldout) and retrieved a very small Phillips screw head from my Wheeler driver kit. After removing the rear screw exposing the battery compartment, I inserted two AAA batteries then performed a function test and refastened the rear cover. I followed by retrieving three pistols and ran a five times trigger pull on each recording the max, min, and average (for both D/A and S/A pulls). I wrote the results on a notepad which I’ll refer back to after a few hundred rounds from each later when I test again for comparison. There are three settings to select from when performing the trigger pulls. The live pull is about worthless as it does show the consistent pull weight throughout the pull but doesn’t pause the max pull weight (pounds and ounces measure which I used) for a few seconds making it nearly impossible to read the resultant LED display. The other reading results are fine. This is a very good device to know for sure what your firearms trigger pull weight actually is versus advertised.
Casey –
This trigger gage is the best I’ve used. The rotating force sensor holder makes configuring the device easy for access to around odd shapes and features on weapons. The force sensor is in direct contact with the trigger making it very accurate.