Print Page | Close Window

Remington Model 700 Trigger

Printed From: OpticsTalk by SWFA, Inc.
Category: Firearms, Bows, and Ammunition
Forum Name: Firearms
Forum Description: All makes, models and uses
URL: http://www.opticstalk.com/forum_posts.asp?TID=9877
Printed Date: March/28/2024 at 17:05
Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 12.01 - http://www.webwizforums.com


Topic: Remington Model 700 Trigger
Posted By: Corky
Subject: Remington Model 700 Trigger
Date Posted: February/16/2008 at 20:45
I have a Remington 700 ADL .30-06 and would like to upgrade my trigger.  What would you guys recommend? 



Replies:
Posted By: RONK
Date Posted: February/16/2008 at 21:36
Originally posted by Corky Corky wrote:

I have a Remington 700 ADL .30-06 and would like to upgrade my trigger.  What would you guys recommend? 
 
 A good gunsmith can tune a 700 trigger to work very smoothly. They have been considered about the best factory trigger by many folks for many years, at least until Savage debuted the Accutrigger.
 If you would rather go aftermarket, Jewells are very good, as are Timneys. Probably some newer ones out now that I'm not up to speed on. Rifle Basix is a name I hear a lot but have never used. Somebody here has one, I bet...


Posted By: Corky
Date Posted: February/16/2008 at 21:55

I think i'll take your advice and have a gunsmith do some fine tuning for me.  Thanks.



Posted By: timber
Date Posted: February/16/2008 at 22:33
Make sure you specify the use of the gun.  It needs to pass the bump and slam tests for hunting.  For target use only it can be adjusted lighter.  I'd recommend one of Remington's authorized service centers.  Most of them will only go down to 3#'s but it'll be safe.


Posted By: RifleDude
Date Posted: February/16/2008 at 23:05
Corky, in what way do you feel your M700 trigger needs improvement?  Pull weight?  Creep?  Overtravel?  Your trigger is fully adjustable for all three.  The factory M700 trigger is a very good general purpose hunting trigger once you change the "lawyer" settings as it came out of the box.  But first, if you do not understand how the trigger works and how to properly adjust it, take it to a qualified gunsmith.  It isn't at all difficult to adjust, but anytime you're dealing with the fire control system of a rifle, the consequences for setting it to an unsafe condition can be extremely severe!
 
If you want a crisp 3lb. or so trigger pull, IMO there's no need to buy an aftermarket trigger, as the factory trigger will give you this.  In a big game hunting trigger, there really is no reason to ever go below 2 lb pull in my humble opinion.
 
If you want a trigger pull that can be adjusted below 2lbs safely, the factory Remington trigger isn't really designed for that.  As Timber said, if after adjustment, a trigger won't pass the bump and slam fire tests, then it IS NOT safe!  The factory Remington design in stock form reaches its safe lower limits at around 2 lbs and a decent amount of sear engagement.  Any lighter pull than that and, as Ronk suggested, you need to look at aftermarket triggers from manufacturers such as Jewell (maybe the finest Rem replacement trigger made), Timney, Rifle Basix, Shilen, etc.


-------------
Ted


Money can't buy happiness... but it's much more comfortable to cry in a Porsche than on a bicycle.


Posted By: Corky
Date Posted: February/17/2008 at 07:39
Pull weight is what I am concerned about.  I don't know what it is set at now.  I spend many hours at the range but my rifle is for hunting.  I'd like to have it set as low as safely possible.  3 lbs seems to be the consensus.  I won't tackle the job by myself.  I'll take it to a gunsmith.


Posted By: RONK
Date Posted: February/17/2008 at 09:53
Originally posted by Corky Corky wrote:

Pull weight is what I am concerned about.  I don't know what it is set at now.  I spend many hours at the range but my rifle is for hunting.  I'd like to have it set as low as safely possible.  3 lbs seems to be the consensus.  I won't tackle the job by myself.  I'll take it to a gunsmith.
 
 I wouldn't be surprised if it currently breaks at 8 pounds or more from the factory. If you specify a crisp , smooth 3 pounds,and your smith achieves that, you simply won't believe the difference.
 These guys are correct, it needs to pass a few tests to be safe after adjustment, which is why you are wise to take it to a pro. I do my own and I have a sneaking suspicion that Rifle Dude sets his own triggers too, but he's a really, really smart engineer or something!
 
       Smile


Posted By: RifleDude
Date Posted: February/17/2008 at 10:40
Originally posted by RONK RONK wrote:

...but he's a really, really smart engineer or something!
 
       Smile
 
Don't know if I'd go THAT far... smartass maybe...
Wink


-------------
Ted


Money can't buy happiness... but it's much more comfortable to cry in a Porsche than on a bicycle.


Posted By: pyro6999
Date Posted: February/17/2008 at 11:43
both of my remingtons broke differently, my 673 went at about 6lbs and my new cdl with the xmark pro trigger broke at 4lbs so i adjusted them both into the 3-3.5 lbs range not really any creep or overtravel nice and it took like 10 min to do one trigger

-------------
They call me "Boots"
375H&H Mag: Yeah, it kills stuff "extra dead"

343 we will never forget

God Bless Chris Ledoux
"good ride cowboy"


Posted By: cheaptrick
Date Posted: February/17/2008 at 12:45
Adjusting a Remington trigger can be safley and easily done yourself, if your so inclined. I did mine.


Posted By: pyro6999
Date Posted: February/17/2008 at 12:47

i dont recommend any amatuer just doing it, the safety ramifications of doing it incorrectly could be fatal, be super careful if you do it your self



-------------
They call me "Boots"
375H&H Mag: Yeah, it kills stuff "extra dead"

343 we will never forget

God Bless Chris Ledoux
"good ride cowboy"


Posted By: RONK
Date Posted: February/17/2008 at 14:14
Originally posted by cheaptrick cheaptrick wrote:

Adjusting a Remington trigger can be safley and easily done yourself, if your so inclined. I did mine.
 
 Yeah, but you're a really, really smart concrete guy!!! We really don't know anything about Corky!
 
 
                              Smile
               
                         


Posted By: Corky
Date Posted: February/17/2008 at 14:54

I'm sure I could do it myself, but I also need to take my Marlin 336 to a gunsmith.  Having him do it will save me from buying one of those trigger pull guages.



Posted By: Tip69
Date Posted: February/18/2008 at 10:01
Corky....... I just went thru this a couple of months ago.  I have a 700 BDL in .223 and after shooting my Son's Savage with AccuTrigger, I had to do something with my Remmy trigger.  I took it to a gunsmith and he did a great job!!  It was breaking at 6.5 lbs and it had both creep and a bit of over travel.  Now it breaks at 3.25 lbs or so and is nice and crisp with NO over travel.  All that for $25.00...... or maybe $35, can't remeber for sure, but either way, I'm VERY Happy!
 
FWIW........ I use this gun for coyotes and we hunt when its cold, so I use a insulated leather glove.   I have not gotten used to the lesser pull required and gun has gone off before I intended it to a couple of times.  I have not had this problem on the days that I didn't have to use a glove, so just be aware.
 
Disclaimer..... no one was injured in the making of this post!   Big%20Smile 


-------------
take em!


Posted By: pyro6999
Date Posted: February/18/2008 at 10:03
i would tell you how to do it but i dont want to, i know there are several other members here who are capable of a trigger job as well and feel the same liability issue keeps them from spilling the beans. i would recommend having a smith do it.

-------------
They call me "Boots"
375H&H Mag: Yeah, it kills stuff "extra dead"

343 we will never forget

God Bless Chris Ledoux
"good ride cowboy"


Posted By: ssf467
Date Posted: February/18/2008 at 11:10
Timmney is a good 1 I like em

-------------
Vox Pop


Posted By: pyro6999
Date Posted: February/18/2008 at 11:12
timney jewell riflebasix a lot of good ones out there, i wont buy one unless i was shooting competitively, 2.5lbs is way light enough for hunting.

-------------
They call me "Boots"
375H&H Mag: Yeah, it kills stuff "extra dead"

343 we will never forget

God Bless Chris Ledoux
"good ride cowboy"


Posted By: Bigdaddy0381
Date Posted: February/18/2008 at 11:39

Yeah I would use a gun smith. I do tons of trigger jobs and a drop fire still makes me nerves after all I have done.



-------------
P&Z Firearms , Pro gun cleanings and gun repair and wood refinishing.

Ecclesiastes 10:2


Posted By: Tip69
Date Posted: February/19/2008 at 12:12
BD.......... I'd say that's a good thing!   Keeps ya sharp.

-------------
take em!


Posted By: OLRVRAT
Date Posted: February/19/2008 at 19:35
You can Google : Remington 700 trigger adjustment. There are lots of links on how to adjust one.   Good Luck


Posted By: 3_tens
Date Posted: February/19/2008 at 20:23
pyro6999
How do you like the xmark pro. Can you give any comparrison to it and the old 700 trigger. Ease of adjusting, smoothness, crispness,ect. You are the first to have one that I know of. I was about to start a new thread but this one should be approprate. I was looking at a jewell ( they are great) but if the xmark pro is more adjustiable and can be had in a left hand, It may be more affordable.


Posted By: 3_tens
Date Posted: February/19/2008 at 20:28
Can any one delete my last post It is not what I Had typed. Need to edit.

-------------
Folks ain't got a sense of humor no more. They don't laugh they just get sore.

Need to follow the rules. Just hard to determine which set of rules to follow
Now the rules have changed again.


Posted By: RifleDude
Date Posted: February/19/2008 at 20:31
Originally posted by 3_tens 3_tens wrote:

Can any one delete my last post It is not what I Had typed. Need to edit.
 
Hi, 3_tens, which portion of your post did you not intend to type?  Contact Chris Farris or Cheaptrick; one of those guys can help you. 
 
I assume that until you reach a certain post count, you don't have the option to delete your own post in the post options.


-------------
Ted


Money can't buy happiness... but it's much more comfortable to cry in a Porsche than on a bicycle.


Posted By: pyro6999
Date Posted: February/19/2008 at 20:44
Originally posted by 3_tens 3_tens wrote:

6999
How do you like the xmark pro. Can you give any comparrison to it and the old 700 trigger. Ease of adjusting, smoothness, crispness,ect. You are the first to have one that I know of. I was about to start a new thread but this one should be approprate. I was looking at a jewell ( they are great) but if the xmark pro is more adjustiable and can be had in a left hand, It may be more affordable.
 
the x mark i have was set at 4 lbs so it wasnt bad out of the box, the glue or whatever they use on the screws is nasty stuff i never could get all three to break free so i could only adjust sear engagement and trigger pull so i only took it to 3.5 lbs. that glue is so nasty i tried to burn it soak scrape it and i broke 2 allen wrenches off trying to get it, i even had some craftsman t handles and they couldnt break it loose. but they break very nice reguardless


-------------
They call me "Boots"
375H&H Mag: Yeah, it kills stuff "extra dead"

343 we will never forget

God Bless Chris Ledoux
"good ride cowboy"


Posted By: Tip69
Date Posted: February/19/2008 at 20:46
actually..... it made me laugh out loud!   Roll%20on%20Floor%20Laughing

-------------
take em!


Posted By: cheaptrick
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 02:32
Police
Attention....We interrupt your regularly scheduled OT programming for an important announcement!!
 
We have had a minor, I repeat minor...uh, potty mouth incident!! Thinking
A highly trained crew of clean up personnel have been deployed and are on the scene, taking all necessary and appropriate measures to protect you and your families.
 
Thank you for your cooperation!! And now, back to your regularly scheduled programming.
 
 
 
  


Posted By: Ed Connelly
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 06:07
you guys are KILLING me!!!Roll%20on%20Floor%20LaughingCheaptrick made me spit my coffee through my nose......
 
 


Posted By: cyborg
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 06:27
Whistling     Mouth%20Taped%20Shut

-------------
With Freedom comes great responsibility, you cannot have one without the other

An armed public are citizens. A disarmed public are subjects.

OATH KEEPER #8233 Support us, and join our cause.

Cyborg


Posted By: RifleDude
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 06:57
Originally posted by pyro6999 pyro6999 wrote:

... the glue or whatever they use on the screws is nasty stuff i never could get all three to break free so i could only adjust sear engagement and trigger pull so i only took it to 3.5 lbs...
 
Wasn't it the sear engagement screw that wouldn't break free?  I thought you were able to adjust pull weight and overtravel, but not sear engagement.  The single screw on the back side of the trigger housing is sear engagement.


-------------
Ted


Money can't buy happiness... but it's much more comfortable to cry in a Porsche than on a bicycle.


Posted By: RifleDude
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 06:58
Originally posted by cheaptrick cheaptrick wrote:

Police
Attention....We interrupt your regularly scheduled OT programming for an important announcement!!
 
We have had a minor, I repeat minor...uh, potty mouth incident!! Thinking
A highly trained crew of clean up personnel have been deployed and are on the scene, taking all necessary and appropriate measures to protect you and your families.
 
Thank you for your cooperation!! And now, back to your regularly scheduled programming.
 
 
 
  
 
Roll%20on%20Floor%20Laughing


-------------
Ted


Money can't buy happiness... but it's much more comfortable to cry in a Porsche than on a bicycle.


Posted By: pyro6999
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 08:05
that right ted, i couldnt remember but yeah i couldnt adjust the sear engagement so i didnt really lighten the pull up much cause i was affraid i wouldnt be able to pass the slam and bump tests your right.

-------------
They call me "Boots"
375H&H Mag: Yeah, it kills stuff "extra dead"

343 we will never forget

God Bless Chris Ledoux
"good ride cowboy"


Posted By: Tip69
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 10:19
Well...... I hope you send it back to them!  Kind of defeats the purpose of having a self-adjustable trigger doesn't it?

-------------
take em!


Posted By: pyro6999
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 10:26
actually they dont want you to adjust there trigger, they use to put directions on how to do it in the owners manual to many people screwed it up and rem took it out for liablity reasons, and they say if you adjust the trigger it can void your warranty and if you send it to rem they replace your trigger and charge you for it not re adjust your trigger

-------------
They call me "Boots"
375H&H Mag: Yeah, it kills stuff "extra dead"

343 we will never forget

God Bless Chris Ledoux
"good ride cowboy"


Posted By: RifleDude
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 10:43
Originally posted by Tip69 Tip69 wrote:

Well...... I hope you send it back to them!  Kind of defeats the purpose of having a self-adjustable trigger doesn't it?
 
Remington puts the glue on the screws precisely because they DON'T want you to adjust it at all.  They intend for the adjustments to be done only by them or a "qualified gunsmith." In fact, if you do change the factory settings, they may void your warranty, and if you ever do send the rifle back to them, they will reset it to the factory settings and charge you for doing so.  This isn't a concern to me, because after I determine that there are no manufacturing defects on a new rifle, from that point on, I do my own work on my guns, if ever required.  
 
Remington is concerned with product liability just like any other firearms company today.  So, if they advertise how to adjust their trigger, they put themselves in legal jeopardy, because by doing so, they are then advocating that the average shooter adjust the trigger him/herself.  Then, if someone who has no idea of trigger function and how to set it safely ends up killing themselves or someone else because of unsafe trigger settings, Remington would be sued big time for telling the consumer how to do it.  This is why even though you can find instructions for adjusting the trigger with a google search, I believe it's unwise to advertise to the world how to do it and why many of us won't mention the procedure.  It's very simple, but if you don't have the sear engagement set adequately, or you're marginal on pull weight, the rifle can accidentally fire if it gets bumped, potentially killing someone.
 
 


-------------
Ted


Money can't buy happiness... but it's much more comfortable to cry in a Porsche than on a bicycle.


Posted By: RifleDude
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 10:47
Having said that, if you are very experienced with trigger function and how to properly adjust them, you can sometimes break the glue free by applying heat and using some penetrating oil.  Pyro told me that his sear engagement screw wouldn't break loose even after applying heat and oil.  Remington now uses a much stronger glue to seal the adjustment screws on the X Mark Pro than they did with the previous generation trigger.

-------------
Ted


Money can't buy happiness... but it's much more comfortable to cry in a Porsche than on a bicycle.


Posted By: pyro6999
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 11:11
well the sear screw was the others werent to bad

-------------
They call me "Boots"
375H&H Mag: Yeah, it kills stuff "extra dead"

343 we will never forget

God Bless Chris Ledoux
"good ride cowboy"


Posted By: mike650
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 12:22
Originally posted by pyro6999 pyro6999 wrote:

timney jewell riflebasix a lot of good ones out there, i wont buy one unless i was shooting competitively, 2.5lbs is way light enough for hunting.


I have a Timney on my m700 set for 3.5lbs and I love it.  Bandito


-------------
“A hunt based only on trophies taken falls far short of what the ultimate goal should be.” – Fred Bear


Posted By: pyro6999
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 13:22
my factory rem trigger is set at that i love it too and it didnt cost extra either.

-------------
They call me "Boots"
375H&H Mag: Yeah, it kills stuff "extra dead"

343 we will never forget

God Bless Chris Ledoux
"good ride cowboy"


Posted By: 3_tens
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 17:09
Put a few drops of MEK (Methyl Ethel Ketone) on it. MEK can be found at most box stores. It will dissolve most adhesiveswith out damaging the metal. This is used extensively in the rebuilding of helicopter panels. (See no names to scramble) $#@%

-------------
Folks ain't got a sense of humor no more. They don't laugh they just get sore.

Need to follow the rules. Just hard to determine which set of rules to follow
Now the rules have changed again.


Posted By: pyro6999
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 17:10
i should have tried that i have some mek too, i will remember that for next time.

-------------
They call me "Boots"
375H&H Mag: Yeah, it kills stuff "extra dead"

343 we will never forget

God Bless Chris Ledoux
"good ride cowboy"


Posted By: Tip69
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 18:26
I thought the new trigger was supposed to be an upgrade that included easy adjustment.... sort of like the Accu trigger.  Sorry, I guess I missed that.  If a pro still has to adjust it, whats the big deal with it?  I love my old one now that its been adjusted!

-------------
take em!


Posted By: RifleDude
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 18:46
Originally posted by Tip69 Tip69 wrote:

I thought the new trigger was supposed to be an upgrade that included easy adjustment.... sort of like the Accu trigger.  Sorry, I guess I missed that.  If a pro still has to adjust it, whats the big deal with it?  I love my old one now that its been adjusted!
 
Remington changed the geometry somewhat to make it safer with a lighter trigger pull, polished up the sear surfaces, and chrome plated the parts.  Supposedly, it gives it a crisper, cleaner trigger pull.
 
The Savage Accutrigger has a pivoting trigger block that prevents the trigger from firing accidentally if the rifle is jolted when using a lighter pull weight setting.  This secondary safety device is the reason why they are able to advertise it as user-adjustable.


-------------
Ted


Money can't buy happiness... but it's much more comfortable to cry in a Porsche than on a bicycle.


Posted By: mike650
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 19:53
Originally posted by pyro6999 pyro6999 wrote:

my factory rem trigger is set at that i love it too and it didnt cost extra either.


That's why your the Optics Jedi.   Bow

-------------
“A hunt based only on trophies taken falls far short of what the ultimate goal should be.” – Fred Bear


Posted By: pyro6999
Date Posted: February/20/2008 at 20:15
well really they are quite good out of the box for adjustability purposes , like i said earlier if it were for competetive shooting then i would go for an aftermarket

-------------
They call me "Boots"
375H&H Mag: Yeah, it kills stuff "extra dead"

343 we will never forget

God Bless Chris Ledoux
"good ride cowboy"


Posted By: Bigdaddy0381
Date Posted: February/21/2008 at 08:16
Originally posted by RifleDude RifleDude wrote:

Originally posted by Tip69 Tip69 wrote:

I thought the new trigger was supposed to be an upgrade that included easy adjustment.... sort of like the Accu trigger.  Sorry, I guess I missed that.  If a pro still has to adjust it, whats the big deal with it?  I love my old one now that its been adjusted!
 
Remington changed the geometry somewhat to make it safer with a lighter trigger pull, polished up the sear surfaces, and chrome plated the parts.  Supposedly, it gives it a crisper, cleaner trigger pull.
 
The Savage Accutrigger has a pivoting trigger block that prevents the trigger from firing accidentally if the rifle is jolted when using a lighter pull weight setting.  This secondary safety device is the reason why they are able to advertise it as user-adjustable.
 
The new remington trigger is a pain in the rump to get to 3 pounds. the sear needs to be repolished. after thats done it work okay but the older remmy triggers are more consistaint.
 
I did one last night and it would pull at 3 then at 3 3/4 then at 3 1/2 it would never pull the same 3 times in a row, but it was much better than the 4 1/2 to 5 1/2 it was before I got it.
It was on a neat rifle.It had ingraved buckmasters on the side and it was number 1 of 50.Pretty and chambers 7mm08.
 


-------------
P&Z Firearms , Pro gun cleanings and gun repair and wood refinishing.

Ecclesiastes 10:2


Posted By: RifleDude
Date Posted: February/21/2008 at 18:18
I haven't had a chance to play with the new X MK Pro trigger yet, BD, and reviews about it have been mixed.  Some like it, some don't.  I do know it comes from the factory set at a much lighter pull than the previous trigger.  My comments were Remington's explanation of what they changed with the new trigger.

-------------
Ted


Money can't buy happiness... but it's much more comfortable to cry in a Porsche than on a bicycle.


Posted By: 8shots
Date Posted: February/22/2008 at 02:54
I am waiting for my Remmy to arrive, then I can also chip in!


Posted By: Tip69
Date Posted: February/22/2008 at 16:41
You mean you still haven't taken possession of it yet?   Man, I feel for ya!

-------------
take em!


Posted By: pyro6999
Date Posted: February/22/2008 at 16:45
didnt 8 shots order a vls?? if he did im pretty sure it doesnt have the xmark pro only select models have it, the cdls xcrs etc high end stuff comes with the xmark the rest like the sps get the old trigger.

-------------
They call me "Boots"
375H&H Mag: Yeah, it kills stuff "extra dead"

343 we will never forget

God Bless Chris Ledoux
"good ride cowboy"


Posted By: luv2shoot
Date Posted: February/29/2008 at 17:48
Originally posted by RifleDude RifleDude wrote:

I haven't had a chance to play with the new X MK Pro trigger yet, BD, and reviews about it have been mixed.  Some like it, some don't.  I do know it comes from the factory set at a much lighter pull than the previous trigger.  My comments were Remington's explanation of what they changed with the new trigger.


My 5R mil-spec has the x-mark pro trigger, so far it seems pretty nice. Out of the box pull was around 4 pounds, I set it to 2 pounds  and have zero complaints. It has zero creep, zero over travel, passed the bump test and pull weight is always within a couple ounces on the digital Lyman trigger pull gauge.  I have been meaning to see how low it will reliably go, but to busy.


Posted By: yellowdog
Date Posted: March/01/2008 at 22:01
Originally posted by Corky Corky wrote:

I have a Remington 700 ADL .30-06 and would like to upgrade my trigger.  What would you guys recommend? 
      Corky, a buddy of mine on here posted this awhile back, this is safe and easy to do if you follow the directions to a tee.( don't just skim through them, read every word carefully, then read them again just to make sure. )  I read this and did my 700 VS & my 700 SENDERO, both now break like glass at 2.5 lbs.  This was my first trigger job ever, and had no problems at all.  Be careful & happy shooting.   http://www.snipercountry.com/Articles/RemingtonTriggers.asp - http://www.snipercountry.com/Articles/RemingtonTriggers.asp Wink

-------------
If you don't want to stand behind our troops, then we will gladly have you stand in front of them.


Posted By: RifleDude
Date Posted: March/02/2008 at 19:36
Those are good, and correct, instructions for adjusting the M700 trigger.  However, I would never recommend someone who is unfamiliar with trigger function to follow instructions off the internet, no matter how thorough or correct they are.
 
PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE, anyone reading this DO NOT bypass checking any trigger adjustments for safety with the bump and slam fire tests!  Adjusting the trigger is very easy, but if you don't understand what you're doing, LEAVE IT ALONE!  Adjusting triggers is not for everyone, and the safety ramifications for setting insufficient sear engagement or too little pull weight can be very grave! 


-------------
Ted


Money can't buy happiness... but it's much more comfortable to cry in a Porsche than on a bicycle.


Posted By: pyro6999
Date Posted: March/02/2008 at 19:38
amen  ted i second that!

-------------
They call me "Boots"
375H&H Mag: Yeah, it kills stuff "extra dead"

343 we will never forget

God Bless Chris Ledoux
"good ride cowboy"


Posted By: Tip69
Date Posted: March/02/2008 at 23:40
my smith only charged $35.00 for my trigger job.......... might be the best money I ever spent!!!!  Have a pro do it!

-------------
take em!



Print Page | Close Window

Forum Software by Web Wiz Forums® version 12.01 - http://www.webwizforums.com
Copyright ©2001-2018 Web Wiz Ltd. - https://www.webwiz.net