- Joined
- Dec 13, 2011
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Most tiggers and sears are surface hardened. If, after the trigger job, you hunt or shoot the rifle a few times a years, it will work. The stone will remove the hardened metal that will "wear" each time the hammer is dropped. The AR15 triggers are notorious. Every one should shy away from removing metal on an AR trigger group. Polishing everything uaually takes a great deal of trigger weight off.
When I work on triggers, I usually reharden the pieces. I heat the piece until it starts to lightly glow and dunk it into thick oil. IMO, water will make it too brittle.
I agree with the trigger. I like 3# with none or just a hint of creep. Pretravel doesn't bother me unless it is a firearm with which I compete.
'Course, he could have a great trigger as it is. 1" @100 with a heavy creepy trigger does'nt go together.
When I work on triggers, I usually reharden the pieces. I heat the piece until it starts to lightly glow and dunk it into thick oil. IMO, water will make it too brittle.
I agree with the trigger. I like 3# with none or just a hint of creep. Pretravel doesn't bother me unless it is a firearm with which I compete.
'Course, he could have a great trigger as it is. 1" @100 with a heavy creepy trigger does'nt go together.