I guess I should explain my last neglect discharge with a DST, I had a few back in my TC days when I didn't even know how to adjust a DST, I even swapped the DSTs on my TCs to the single trigger TC sold at the time to replace DSTs.
My last neglect discharge was just after a great friend gave me all his B/P stuff as he was dying from cancer, this was pistols, a rifle and trade gun as well as all his powder, molds, range rods and two large tackle boxes full of accessories. I had never shot a properly made flintlock before, the one he gave me had a Bill Large Barrel and a lightning-fast Roller lock. My friend could no longer hold and shoot his gun but said he had shot a pound of powder out of it every week when he was at his peak of M/L involvement. My friend could do all the trick shots like cutting a lead ball in half on an axe and cutting playing cards as well.
He had his DST set so light the one only had to touch the side of it to set the gun off. I was so overwhelmed by his generosity that I treated his rifle like a new baby, I even carried it to my deer stand in a gun case to keep from scratching it. While he was alive there was always the hope that he might beat the cancer, he took every experimental chemo treatment that came down the pipes and his 6 months life span turned into years. I had hopes of returning his rifle to him and was determined it would go back to him when he was healthy in exactly the same condition that it was when he gave it to me.
I never adjusted the trigger to be "hunting correct" until I had the negligent discharge on a nice lust crazed 8 point buck that I called in to 10 yards on a very cold frosty morning. As I lowered my gun to shoot him, my cold finger apparently touched the side of the trigger and off it went. The buck just stood there as I reloaded but I rammed the ball a little too far into the muzzle before I cut the patch off, I was "fumbling in the heat of the battle". When I rammed the ball home the jag hung on the excess patching and I couldn't pull the ramrod out. I fumbled around for a few minutes while the buck horned a sapling and didn't even notice me. I finally pulled the patch and ball out and loaded the rifle correctly. By this time the buck was casually walking off and only offered me a Texas heart shot so I let him go.
After this incident I softened my stand on the rifle and adjusted the trigger to the point it actually had to be pulled, not just touched. I kept the rifle pristine and babied it through the years just in case a miracle happened and my friend recovered, he made it ten years then the cancer spread to his brain and that was it.
My friends rifle put a pile of deer in my freezer and sparked a gun building interest in me that is still going strong today. I do prefer a single trigger for hunting but it seems like all my rifles from kits (TOW, Kibler) have them in the supplied parts so I put them in, I don't put DST in my scratch builds unless it is a TN rifle.