I won't argue with the basic point, but with a minimal stroke, there is less time for sprung things to engage and quit bouncing. A weak disconnector spring has less time to engage or less snap to do it in a short time. Or not.
I bring up the stroke because it seems to happen with under powered ammo more than stuff the flings the bolt carrier all the way to the rear.
The disconnector, second stage spring, in a RRA two stage is problematic. RRA wants the entire lower back to sort it out and fit the trigger for you. It is just as often NOT the spring itself, but the amount of second stage engagement left after holes, hammer, trigger, and disconnector wear in ever so slightly. A slightly too long pin hole distance in the lower is death to this sort of two stage. Too limited second stage engagement. Likewise too short a distance is the spongy terrible triggers you occasionally read about.
(As an aside, there are combinations of .22LR ammo such that the low powered standard velocity ammo will push the bolt to the rear and pick up a new cartridge, but never set the disconnector. They will sometimes run 5-10 shells before a more powerful one sets the disconnector.)