Funnily enough, they are called a starter.
By pulling the trigger... :P
on the right side of a crvena zastava-cal 7.65mm mod70 pistol you will see a round pin above the trigger push that pin out and the pistol will disassemble by pulling the slide forward. johnny
pull the trigger
One is on the trigger
Generally a pistol lock fits in the trigger housing to prevent the trigger from being pulled. Usually takes a key to open and close it.
By 1917 Black and Decker patented the first pistol grip, trigger switch electric drill.
A safety device that blocks the hammer. The hammer being the part of a pistol that impacts the primer. The primer being the part of a metalic cartridge that detonates or ignites the propellant that propells the projectile or bullet. This safety device may be actuated by the firer of the pistol by moving a lever or switch or by pulling the trigger to its full travel. The trigger being the switch, lever. or button that fires the pistol when pressed or moved by the firer. The device that requires an intentional movement of a button or lever to activate would be a manual safety. The device that activates by gripping the pistol's frame or by pressing the trigger to fire might be considered a passive safety. The term hammer block safety would differentiate between safetys that block function of the pistol by stopping movement of the hammer and those that block movement of the trigger or some other part of the pistol to prevent unintentional firing of the pistol.
Some handguns can only fire if the hammer is in the cocked position (typically, pulled back). These are referred to "single action." Other handguns can fire even if the hammer is down (not cocked). Pulling the trigger brings the hammer back (cocking) and then fires when the trigger pull is complete. These are considered "double action." They not only Fire the pistol, but Cock it as well.
The pistol is intended to be fired from the hand. It is pointed at the target, the trigger pulled, and it fires.
One shot for each pull of the trigger. The trigger does not cock the hammer.
An M9 pistol is not capable of automatic fire, in any form. The firing mechanism is not designed to fire a new round until the trigger is released and pulled again. That is, what is commonly called the "action" of the pistol needs the trigger to be pulled to release the firing pin after each round is fired.
There would be 2 muscles involved in pulling the trigger: 1 - Flexor digitorum superficialis - flexes the proximal interphalangeal joint 2 - Flexor digitorum profundus - flexes the distal interphalangeal joint