Free: Contests & Raffles.
Do yourself a favor and look up how to do a trigger job on each of your rifles. I promise you fine grit sandpaper and an hour will both educate you on how your weapon works AND will make it shoot smoother. I've done this on a BUNCH of my guns, and while I have an aftermarket trigger in one rifle, I am unlikely to buy another. 2cSent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk
Quote from: Special T on April 13, 2020, 10:16:38 PMDo yourself a favor and look up how to do a trigger job on each of your rifles. I promise you fine grit sandpaper and an hour will both educate you on how your weapon works AND will make it shoot smoother. I've done this on a BUNCH of my guns, and while I have an aftermarket trigger in one rifle, I am unlikely to buy another. 2cSent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk I have an AR with a no-name stock trigger. I took it apart, did some file work to the hammer where the trigger catches it, then worked the hammer and corresponding part of the trigger with a dremel tool cotton tip and polishing compound until the contact surfaces were mirror smooth. The result is not quite as good as an aftermarket trigger, but the price was right. It shoots descent and I have the satisfaction that I made it better.Note: If you file too much on the hammer you will have to file the semi-auto sear to make sure the hammer doesn't release prematurely. If you file too much still you run out of capacity to fix it on the sear and you have to buy new parts. Did that once..... It was a good learning experience though. I now understand how the trigger works 100x better than I did before that project.
I’ve done a few diy polish jobs on ar triggers. It helps but it’s no after market. If you decide you have $200 for a trigger I’d go cmc. Great trigger imo
LOL at people suggesting 2 stage $200 triggers when he wants a budget 1 stage. These are actually really good https://www.righttobear.com/Enhanced-Nickel-Teflon-Trigger-Assembly-p/enta-01.htmOnly problem is that they are often out of stock.