Gun trigger bent? Suggestions?

DapperDan

WKR
Joined
Oct 25, 2012
Messages
1,607
Any idea why this trigger would be bent? It was in my wife’s 7wsm. Worked perfect last year. Pulled it out and it was dropping the firing pin when closing the bolt but not every time. Dropped the firing pin when going from safe to fire a few times. Neither is consistent.

Pulled the stock and the trigger looked a little gummy so I pulled the trigger to clean it better. After cleaning is when I noticed the slight bend and marring on the trigger assembly. I looked all over the bolt face and lugs and rear of bolt and can't see anything that would look like it had been rubbing the trigger assembly.

And I removed the trigger with the appropriate size punch and tinny hammer.

Any suggestions?


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I’ve cleaned the trigger with carb cleaner. (No lighter fluid) put it back on the action and have cycled the action several times. Doesn’t seem to be an issue so far.


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Just to add. This is a Timney trigger


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Had to have taken a pretty hard fall at some point when the barreled action was out of the stock.

That’s a Jewell trigger, not a Timney by the way.


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I can’t visualize how the trigger housing could be bent outward like that while pinned in the rifle. Maybe that’s a manufacturing defect when the sides were stamped out, but it’s so obvious someone should have noticed it.

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Had to have taken a pretty hard fall at some point when the barreled action was out of the stock.

That’s a Jewell trigger, not a Timney by the way.


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You’re right. Sorry. Was thinking about another fun while typing


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So. An update.

Cleaned the trigger with b 12 carb cleaner. Let it dry and worked the safety. It was pretty rough and sticky in a few spots from the total lack of lubrication. I ran and got zippo lighter fluid and hosed it down real good allowing it toe dry once again. That seems to have remedied the safety. I then followed steps 1, 2, and 3. Before starting step 4 I pulled out my trigger scale and tested it 3 times. All 3 pulls were within 1/10th of an ounce. I left it at 15.5 ounces and called it good.



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There is no way I'd run that trigger with that damage regardless of how it works now after running lighter fluid (?) through it. If it was malfunctioning before, you're really done nothing to remedy the problem. Remington showed us what ignoring a finicky trigger leads to. I'd at least contact Jewell and see if they'll repair it.
 
There is no way I'd run that trigger with that damage regardless of how it works now after running lighter fluid (?) through it. If it was malfunctioning before, you're really done nothing to remedy the problem. Remington showed us what ignoring a finicky trigger leads to. I'd at least contact Jewell and see if they'll repair it.

I’m familiar with Remington and the trigger issues they had. Owned one that went boom without pulling the trigger. The issue with this trigger is it was gummed up. The lighter fluid cleans and lubricates even after it dries. Gun oil is not a friend to triggers. Gun oil leads to the situation I was having.

I will mess with this gun again before I attempt to cycle a round through it. If I don’t feel good about it I will skip calling jewel and buy a trigger tech diamond and be done with it.


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