It's been awhile since I tried one. Boyd liked it, wonder if he still does. I had issues with it. My issues may not have mattered. I found there was quite a bit of friction in the center of the pin where the washer and two springs met as the pin was cycled. The springs didn't load flat and caused the washer to sit crooked which led to binding/friction right in the middle of the pin. It felt good lifting the bolt but my gut said the friction wouldn't be good for lock time. I attempted to polish and radius the washer and flipped springs end for end, spun them, etc... in an attempt to reduce or eliminate the binding but no combination worked to my satisfaction. I did nothing to quantify lock time so it is what it is and it may be fine but I didn't like it. Maybe someone can get someone like Greg Walley with the equipment to test it and see if the added friction makes a difference compared to a std spring. I think it's sitting in a bin on the shelf. If I still have it I'd be happy to send it to him for testing.
seeing any of those problems with the one I have. I de-bured, etc but mine sits pretty flat . I thought it way better than bellied springs.
Pete
I checked the cocked weight on my Viper, and it was about 25# with a good solid whack when dry fired. As far as I can tell there is absolutely no lack of energy.
The ends don't have to slide on each other because they are wound in opposite directions. As they compress, their respective rotations cancel out where they meet, which means that they do not turn on their outside ends.
I am pretty sure they could be epoxied together and still work as designed.
I pulled mine back out to revisit it. It's a short action and is ~23lbs compressed to what would be cocked position. The middle of the spring @ washer drags a lot IMO when cycled. To attempt to fix it to my satisfaction I'd have to regrind the ends of the springs to get the ends of the springs to sit flat and not cock off to the side. As it is now when it's installed all four ends of the springs are pushed to one side or another causing more snake to this setup than a standard spring. Maybe mine's a turd? Anyway it got thrown in the bin because I didn't think it was worth the time for me to try to fix it. Again maybe it doesn't matter.
I pulled mine back out to revisit it. It's a short action and is ~23lbs compressed to what would be cocked position. The middle of the spring @ washer drags a lot IMO when cycled. To attempt to fix it to my satisfaction I'd have to regrind the ends of the springs to get the ends of the springs to sit flat and not cock off to the side. As it is now when it's installed all four ends of the springs are pushed to one side or another causing more snake to this setup than a standard spring. Maybe mine's a turd? Anyway it got thrown in the bin because I didn't think it was worth the time for me to try to fix it. Again maybe it doesn't matter.