fwafwow
WKR
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2018
- Messages
- 5,551
Tangential question - do Cooper rifles use a Remington 700 trigger?
Tangential question - do Cooper rifles use a Remington 700 trigger?
I'm pretty sure they do not, but have never had one in hand.Tangential question - do Cooper rifles use a Remington 700 trigger?
Are you able to swap barrels via an internal action wrench, or haven't you rebarreled since you bedded/glued the bottom metal?The biggest thing that I’ve seen is to fully- and I mean FULLY- bed the action area and barrel shank, and generously free float the barrel. I would also bed (I permanently glued) the bottom metal. Basically take the entire action, trigger, and bottom metal area and cover it completely in beding so that all the wood is covered.
Functionally it turns the action area into a mini chassis and I have not seen any issue at all from the wood with heavy use in very nasty weather.
Thanks for the info. Stray gas handling of the T3 is a pet peeve of mine, and your experience illustrates why... gas directed at the shooter.While it isn't the subject of this thread at all, the only thing that really gives me pause on a Tikka is the amount of gas that comes back at a shooter. On two 6.5 CMs using starting loads from Hornady's manual for their 100 grain bullets, a strong blast of gas was the result when cases weren't expanding enough to seal the chamber. While rare, it would seem that a case split or separation, or popped primer would be pretty bad.
Thank you!Thanks for the info. Stray gas handling of the T3 is a pet peeve of mine, and your experience illustrates why... gas directed at the shooter.
That stated, there's no one perfect rifle design out there. They each have pros and cons. For example, the Savage 110 has gas baffles at the front and rear of the bolt body, but all of mine had feeding issues. The M70 CRF eliminated the C-ring of the 98 with a coned breech, which allows stray gas down the left raceway, and when Winchester reintroduced the CRF they added a sacrificial baffle to the bolt body but some astute shooters have stated that the baffle isn't very effective and still allows gas to travel down that path. Mauser designed the 98 with the C-ring to prevent that.
I have an S20 and like the design a little bit more than the T3, but simple visual review isn't the same as experiencing 60k+ PSI going someplace that it's not supposed to. I'm mostly concerned with case failures, and not blown primers or obstructions. Most bolt bodies have transverse vent holes, but sometimes the path of least resistance is out the back of the bolt. Unobstructed gas down the left raceway is headed towards the shooter's face and eyeball. The 98 has a flange to divert the gas. Savage has that ugly baffle!
Anyway, glad that you just got gassed and nothing severe like stray particles.
See post #62 in this thread.Does anyone have any input on how a Weatherby Mark V action might function in this test regarding icing conditions, extreme cold, and drop safety?
Does anyone have any input on how a Weatherby Mark V action might function in this test regarding icing conditions, extreme cold, and drop safety?
Form, have you ever done any testing regarding tikka triggers and fine dust or sand? I’ve learned that jewell Rem 700 triggers and dust don’t mix.
Just curious as I’ve seen windy dusty days shut down bolt rifles at competitions in Texas and Oklahoma. Not just the trigger but lock up the bolt too.
Thank you Form. Another follow up question. Could one expect the new Sako 90 trigger/action with its hex wrench adjustability and modifications to the action to continue the Sako tradition of being a good performer in these conditions?
but then would get a slam fire when closing the bolt thereafter, every time.
Day 3, ran the bolt. It was sticky and binding. The trigger worked once, but then would get a slam fire when closing the bolt thereafter, every time.
Actually firing upon closing, as in rounds went off? Or it wouldn’t stay cocked?
Anything is possible, however I have seen dozens purposely tried to be made to fail and have never been able to make one fire on closing. Sometimes it seems like it would fire by the sound, but they have never actually fired the round.
Do you close the bolt on an empty chamber and drop the firing pin, safety off?