After participating an a couple threads regarding Emeks and 'entry level' guns in general, I came to realize I was not alone in being underwhelmed with my stock Emek (EMF100) trigger. I figured I'd give my thoughts on what many consider to be the premier aftermarket trigger for this series of guns.
I chose to purchase the ID trigger primarily for the attention to detail Simon describes went into this in his installation video (minimalist, screws oriented for minimal binding on the switch, flat, leverage). I also bought this for the reputation ID has for quality, and the fact that it hasn't had the QC issues I've heard about the Infamous trigger (everything from stripped screws, sharp edges, and not being cut for the trigger spring to tool marks out of the box). These issues have supposedly been fixed, but the ID trigger is a couple bucks cheaper anyway. There is also the Emach trigger, which is half the price of the ID trigger, but it lacks an activation adjustment screw (which is half the point of these trigger upgrades imo), and also may not work with aftermarket switches.
Of course, the trigger I got had damage to the anno around the bottom two screws, and a bit of damage to the threads of the middle screw (which wouldn't have affected performance anyway). I don't know if this was an apprentice's doing or if Simon was having a bad day, but the baggie it came in hadn't been opened before, and it didn't appear to have happened in transit. After contacting the retailer, I got a partial refund in an amount I deem to be appropriate. A tap solved the issue of the threads, and I plan to get an anno touch up/automotive paint pen to touch up the rest. Once it was installed however, you can hardly notice the marks unless there's direct light on it.
Installation was easy. Pin goes in one way, and has a chamfered end and a knurled end. It also includes a lighter trigger spring (something I don't know is included in the other kits) so you don't have to go tearing apart pens or buying kits for a new one. Without air on the gun, this spring makes the trigger walkable, and the trigger is smooth.
The pre travel screw in mine isn't necessary, as no matter the position it's in, it always has no slack when the safety is on. Adjustment was easy. I adjusted mine to have a little bit of travel before the trigger breaks, and a bit of post travel as well. Coming from sear tripping guns, and actual firearms, I like a trigger pull with stages. This adds pseudo stages to what was before a mushy trigger pull. While there is not really a change in pull weight depending on trigger pull status, you can gauge more accurately how much longer it is until it breaks. For some reason, the trigger does feel a bit heavier now. I don't think it is, and it's probably because I no longer have any inertia built up before the trigger makes contact with the switch. The trigger might be walkable if an aftermarket switch is installed. I personally have no interest in that, as this gun is meant for woodsball, and very rarely do I find myself needing to rip ropes, or playing any kind of speedball format. I think PE OEM stuff will be more reliable anyway.
The few gripes I have with this trigger are obviously the damage I had to deal with initially, and the lack of colours. The gloss black is nice and goes with anything, and the gloss red trigger goes very nicely with any of the black bodies, but that is it.
Overall, based on what I've heard about the other triggers, I do think this one is the best. If you want the fancy milling, lasering and colours, or your local store only stocks the Infamous trigger and not ID stuff, go ahead and get it. It'll probably be fine, but it will cost you a bit more. If price point is your deal, then the Emach is for you. You will be sacrificing some major features however. The review is a bit long for what it is, but I hope I've helped some of you.
Lastly, if you're looking at the Emek as a mech gun with nice shot quality; I wouldn't recommend it, even with this. I'd recommend a used classic Automag. IMO the ID trigger brings the Emek's performance in line with what an Automag is stock in that regard, but the Emek setup is 3-4x more expensive than a used mag. If you're looking for modern features and the ability to reliably rip paint without tuning, then I'd say the Emek is up your alley.
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I chose to purchase the ID trigger primarily for the attention to detail Simon describes went into this in his installation video (minimalist, screws oriented for minimal binding on the switch, flat, leverage). I also bought this for the reputation ID has for quality, and the fact that it hasn't had the QC issues I've heard about the Infamous trigger (everything from stripped screws, sharp edges, and not being cut for the trigger spring to tool marks out of the box). These issues have supposedly been fixed, but the ID trigger is a couple bucks cheaper anyway. There is also the Emach trigger, which is half the price of the ID trigger, but it lacks an activation adjustment screw (which is half the point of these trigger upgrades imo), and also may not work with aftermarket switches.
Of course, the trigger I got had damage to the anno around the bottom two screws, and a bit of damage to the threads of the middle screw (which wouldn't have affected performance anyway). I don't know if this was an apprentice's doing or if Simon was having a bad day, but the baggie it came in hadn't been opened before, and it didn't appear to have happened in transit. After contacting the retailer, I got a partial refund in an amount I deem to be appropriate. A tap solved the issue of the threads, and I plan to get an anno touch up/automotive paint pen to touch up the rest. Once it was installed however, you can hardly notice the marks unless there's direct light on it.
Installation was easy. Pin goes in one way, and has a chamfered end and a knurled end. It also includes a lighter trigger spring (something I don't know is included in the other kits) so you don't have to go tearing apart pens or buying kits for a new one. Without air on the gun, this spring makes the trigger walkable, and the trigger is smooth.
The pre travel screw in mine isn't necessary, as no matter the position it's in, it always has no slack when the safety is on. Adjustment was easy. I adjusted mine to have a little bit of travel before the trigger breaks, and a bit of post travel as well. Coming from sear tripping guns, and actual firearms, I like a trigger pull with stages. This adds pseudo stages to what was before a mushy trigger pull. While there is not really a change in pull weight depending on trigger pull status, you can gauge more accurately how much longer it is until it breaks. For some reason, the trigger does feel a bit heavier now. I don't think it is, and it's probably because I no longer have any inertia built up before the trigger makes contact with the switch. The trigger might be walkable if an aftermarket switch is installed. I personally have no interest in that, as this gun is meant for woodsball, and very rarely do I find myself needing to rip ropes, or playing any kind of speedball format. I think PE OEM stuff will be more reliable anyway.
The few gripes I have with this trigger are obviously the damage I had to deal with initially, and the lack of colours. The gloss black is nice and goes with anything, and the gloss red trigger goes very nicely with any of the black bodies, but that is it.
Overall, based on what I've heard about the other triggers, I do think this one is the best. If you want the fancy milling, lasering and colours, or your local store only stocks the Infamous trigger and not ID stuff, go ahead and get it. It'll probably be fine, but it will cost you a bit more. If price point is your deal, then the Emach is for you. You will be sacrificing some major features however. The review is a bit long for what it is, but I hope I've helped some of you.
Lastly, if you're looking at the Emek as a mech gun with nice shot quality; I wouldn't recommend it, even with this. I'd recommend a used classic Automag. IMO the ID trigger brings the Emek's performance in line with what an Automag is stock in that regard, but the Emek setup is 3-4x more expensive than a used mag. If you're looking for modern features and the ability to reliably rip paint without tuning, then I'd say the Emek is up your alley.
Sent from my Pixel 4a using Tapatalk
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