FRT Trigger vs Binary Trigger — Which Is Right for Your AR-15?
by Jonathan clausen on Apr 09, 2026
FRT Trigger vs Binary Trigger — Which Is Right for Your AR-15?
Both FRT triggers and binary triggers promise faster shooting on your AR-15. Both are federally legal. Both require zero lower receiver modifications. But they work completely differently — and choosing the wrong one for how you shoot will leave money on the table and performance unrealized. Here's the complete breakdown.
How Each Trigger Works — The Core Difference
The single most important thing to understand before choosing between these two: they achieve speed in fundamentally different ways. One uses the gun's own mechanics. The other uses your finger twice.
The FRT Trigger Cycle — Step by Step
The Binary Trigger Cycle — Step by Step
FRT vs Binary Trigger — Full Comparison
| FRT Trigger | Binary Trigger | |
|---|---|---|
| How it works | BCG forces trigger reset | Fires on pull AND release |
| Rounds per pull | 1 per pull | 1 pull + 1 release = 2 |
| Speed ceiling | BCG cycle speed (~1,150 RPM) ✓ | Shooter's pull/release speed |
| Technique required | Maintain rearward pressure ✓ | Pull and release rhythm |
| Learning curve | Low — intuitive ✓ | Moderate — timing matters |
| Platform availability | AR-15 primary | AR-15, AK, PCC, others ✓ |
| Hardware needed | M16 BCG + H2 buffer | Standard BCG works ✓ |
| Install complexity | Drop-in cassette ✓ | Drop-in trigger group |
| Safety consideration | Fires only on pull ✓ | Fires on release — requires discipline |
| Legal — federal | Legal post-May 2025 DOJ settlement ✓ | Legal federally |
| Legal — state restrictions | Fewer state restrictions ✓ | More states restrict binary |
| Price range | $299 (Partisan Disruptor) | $199–$399 depending on brand |
| Reliability | Fewer moving parts ✓ | More complex mechanism |
| Best for | Maximum speed, AR-15 builds | Multi-platform, controlled rapid fire |
Which Is Actually Faster?
This is what everyone wants to know — and the honest answer is the FRT wins on raw mechanical speed ceiling, but the binary can be faster in skilled hands at controlled distances.
FRT Speed
The Partisan Disruptor FRT achieves cyclic rates around 1,150 rounds per minute in Enhanced Semi-Auto mode. That's the ceiling — it's determined entirely by how fast the BCG cycles, not by the shooter's fingers. A trained shooter and an untrained shooter will achieve similar split times on an FRT because the mechanism does the work.
Binary Speed
Binary triggers are technically capable of firing two rounds in the time it takes to pull and release — which in skilled hands can be extremely fast. But the speed is entirely technique-dependent. An experienced binary shooter can fire at impressive rates. A new binary shooter firing inconsistently will be slower than a standard semi-auto trigger because the release shot timing is unpredictable.
Safety Considerations — This Matters
FRT Safety Profile
An FRT only fires when the trigger is deliberately pulled. If you release the trigger at any point the firing stops. There is no unintended discharge risk from releasing the trigger — in fact releasing the trigger stops the firing sequence entirely. This makes the FRT more intuitive for most shooters because it behaves like a standard trigger in terms of safety discipline.
Binary Trigger Safety Profile
A binary trigger fires on release — which introduces a specific safety consideration. If you pull the trigger and then decide mid-pull you don't want the shot, you must either switch the selector back to semi before releasing or accept that releasing will fire a round. This requires deliberate training to manage correctly. Inexperienced shooters can experience unexpected discharges on trigger release if not properly trained on binary operation.
Legal Status — FRT vs Binary in 2026
Both are federally legal. The differences are at the state level — and FRT triggers are legal in more states than binary triggers.
FRT Trigger Legal States
FRT triggers are federally legal following the May 2025 DOJ settlement. Restricted in: CA, CT, DE, HI, IL, MA, MD, MN, NJ, NY, OR, RI, WA, and DC.
Binary Trigger Legal States
Binary triggers face restrictions in a broader list of states. Several states that allow FRT triggers have banned binary triggers due to their dual-fire mechanism. Always verify your specific state before purchasing either type.
→ See our full FRT trigger state-by-state legal guide for current status.
Partisan Disruptor FRT + M16 BCG + H2 Buffer
The definitive drop-in FRT for AR-15. $299 standalone or $449.99 complete bundle. Ships today.
Shop the Partisan Bundle — $449.99 Read the full Partisan Disruptor review →Who Should Buy Each Trigger
Our Recommendation for AR-15 Owners
For anyone running a standard AR-15 platform, the FRT trigger is the better choice — and the Partisan Disruptor is the FRT we carry and recommend. Here's why:
- The AR Takedown Tool — which you likely already have or need — makes FRT installation completely damage-free
- The FRT's mechanical reset means your speed is consistent whether you're a new shooter or a trained competitor
- The Partisan Disruptor at $299 is the best price-to-performance ratio in the FRT category
- Our bundle pairs it with the correct M16 BCG and H2 buffer so you're not guessing at hardware compatibility
- The FRT fires only on pull — no discipline adjustment needed beyond maintaining rearward pressure
Binary triggers are legitimate tools for specific use cases — multi-platform shooters, AK owners, or those who specifically prefer the pull-release firing mechanic. But for the AR-15 platform, an FRT gives you more consistent, more mechanical, and more reliable rapid fire with less training overhead.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Partisan Disruptor — Best FRT for AR-15
Drop-in cassette. USA made. $299 standalone or $449.99 with M16 BCG + H2 buffer. Ships from our USA warehouse.
Get the Partisan Disruptor Bundle — $449.99 Learn more about FRT triggers →