I'll let more experienced people say what "should" be! And please pardon me if I use incorrect or unusual terminology somewhere in this post - but correct me so I know!
As the lock is cycled from hammer fully forwards, through half cock, to full cock, the sear rides on the outside of the tumbler. The contact between the sear and the tumbler sets the angle of the sear, which sets the height of the sear trigger bar.
The trigger and set trigger plates may have heights which will be a little different depending on whether the trigger is set or unset.
I don't have any concerns really about contact between the sear trigger bar and the trigger plate(s) when in an uncocked position, as long as there is no binding or strain on the system. It is not a safety issue. I just make sure the trigger can be unset from being set when the hammer is fully forwards. That might be something a person would want to do.
There needs to be room for the sear to drop fully into the halfcock notch of the tumbler. I consider anything preventing this to be most definitely a safety issue! The sear needs to be able to drop into the notch, whether the trigger is set or unset.
At full cock, the sear needs to be able to make sufficient engagement with the fullcock notch of the tumbler that there is no way the hammer can drop unintentionally. That is with the trigger set or unset.
At full cock, the trigger needs to be settable without disturbing the sear engagement with the tumbler.
The lock plate must be secured to the stock in a sufficiently stable fashion that it has one alignment. IF the alignment can shift, then the trigger to sear engagement can shift. That is not good.
Excess travel of the front trigger before the plate engages the sear bar is not something I like. I like the minimum I can get away with, while all the above criteria are met. File or stone down the triggers as needed for the safety issues above, but go no farther than needed. If it is already sloppy, then low temp silver solder a piece of steel on top of the trigger's vertical plate and start fitting again. I like the steel from left over allen wrenches for this. They seem to keep some hardness through the process and then polish up to a nice smooth trigger action afterwards. Leaving it slightly wider than the original trigger blade width also reduces any galling tendencies.
All IMHO of course! Feel free to disagree with anything I've said! I'm here to learn!
Gerald