Thank you everyone......I will pas these opinions on to one of the persons mentioned above.
Thanks ,I`ll go check that right now. JeffFirst thing I would check is the firing pin. Make sure it is free to move and not stuck forward.
Back in 91-92 , The person who assembled it, fixed the issue, never told my buddy what was the issue.
+1 on the adjustable issue. Mine was an issue with a disconnector that worked fine for awhile but loctite wasn’t doing the job for me. Switched to non-adjustable mainly SSA-E and no more trouble. I think the loctite wasn’t fresh and I didn’t get a good set, but that’s just another lesson learned. Probably more my fault than anything to do with the adjustable trigger.The A/R triggers that are prone to doubling (or more) occur mostly with the triggers that allow adjustment and when you go too far with the sear engagement - you will get it. I've done it with three different makes of triggers. From my experience - anytime you try to set well below two pounds in an A/R, you are risking doubles with any trigger due to recoil-induced jarring. At two and above - the recoil doesn't hamper as much.
I've had that happen with a Jard trigger but only when shooting free recoil from a bench and never more than two shots.I had that issue with a Jewel trigger. I was shooting for group and squeezing the trigger very gently. The recoil was enough to reset the trigger and fire another shot. My groups weren’t very good and I went to a heavier trigger. It’s not fun when you don’t expect it.
I had that problem a while back. The rifle had not been modified. I used some Bench Rest primers. The firing pin in an AR is inertia driven. Thin primer cups were causing some slam fires.I have observed a couple guys who's AR 15's doubled and triple fired by accident,. Besides less than minimum sear engagement is there some other cause like to much lube on the bolt etc. that causes this ?