SouthPaw
WKR
Thats perfect, thank you!Lumley arms
Thats perfect, thank you!Lumley arms
If you need something NOW, there may or may not have been a carefully shaped, heavy duty paper clip serving the same function in my Tikka for the past 2 years....Thats perfect, thank you!
Hah, if I didn't have other Tikka rifles to "borrow" one from, that would've been my next step. Glad it's holding up for ya!If you need something NOW, there may or may not have been a carefully shaped, heavy duty paper clip serving the same function in my Tikka for the past 2 years....
This can be an issue with collet dies, they just size minimallyCircling back to this. My 223 accuracy problems apparently stemmed from the brass. For reasons I don't really understand, ie they're not measurable, if I shoot the same loads through the same cases after annealing and using a lee collet neck size die my groups shrink by over a full moa. I have never seen this much, or this repeatable of a change from just brass prep, but whatever, it's working now.
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Is this a DIY job or recommend a smith?You will need to change bolt stop to a long but yes…Tikkas generally have long throats.
You can get their sportsman stock and it’s closer to 21oz. I have both. Both good.So simple a cave man can do it….just be careful of the small spring. Mountain tactical has a good video. The tikka stock in a lite is around 30 ounces. I don’t know how much a superlight stock weighs. The Stocky’s carbon VG is about as light of a stock as you will be able to get for the Tikka: 23 oz.
No issues with the stock or the bottom metal that I have had. Some people use flat metal washers so the plastic bottom metal won’t crack or pull through the holes on after market stocks. I like the MT bottom metal because it is aluminum, has a larger hole if you use gloves, and has a very positive push button for the mags. You can still use the Tikka factory mags with the MT bottom metal.What’s the worry about the bottom metal? I’ve seen several threads discussing different bottom metal. What’s the issue with stock?
Second this....if not just get a new stock/chassis that fits your fancy. Those tikkas are great out of the box. Slap a good bipod on them and they're better than most rifles worth twice as much.If you’re keeping the factory stock: a vertical grip ($20) and comb riser (if needed).
An aftermarket stock if you want something that fits you better and/or change in weight.
Otherwise, most of the other upgrades don’t add anything other than weight. The triggers on both my Tikkas got down to 2lbs, so I didn’t even bother replacing springs.