- Joined
- May 1, 2024
- Messages
- 982
Arent there after market triggers?
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I haven’t seen that, but hear it is common. I also don’t run the bolt like a maniac, lol.I have two Howa Minis and both exhibit the same trigger issue when cycled quickly. One does it reliably, the other only on occasion.
What’s different about the gen2? Already sounds like you’re going to have to replace the bm like on the gen 1. I found an howa 243win 16” ultralite in a gun shop a few years ago and was planning on buying it but I couldn’t hardly get the mag in or out with the bolt opened and back & cycled the bolt and it felt terrible so I backed out. My 16” tikka 243win weighs 5.4lbs vs 4.18 for the howa super light. It feeds better, is smoother, has better mags, and has a better trigger and bm. As much as I’d like the weight savings of the howa the down sides are to high and some of the issues are random. Bad feeding, trigger issues, bad stock fit, need to replace bottom metal, rough bolt cycling. If they would fix the issues and charge more I would try one. But for now a tikka at roughly 1lb heavier is worth it. Gun can be had for $650, $125 for muzzle threading, and a $400 stockys stock on a deal, at $1175total. Also you can get an ultralite contour barrel like the Howas and make the tikkas even lighter. I will say quite of few ppl I know run howa’s because they got them cheap. And after they’ve had a lot of rounds on them the bolt does smooth up some. And some of the older ones have smoother cycling bolts to start with.
Good to know
Can’t argue with that, both is best haha. I’m sure I could learn to love the howa if I spent a few months working out the kinks and buying some aftermarket parts for it.
What’s different about the gen2? Already sounds like you’re going to have to replace the bm like on the gen 1. I found an howa 243win 16” ultralite in a gun shop a few years ago and was planning on buying it but I couldn’t hardly get the mag in or out with the bolt opened and back & cycled the bolt and it felt terrible so I backed out. My 16” tikka 243win weighs 5.4lbs vs 4.18 for the howa super light. It feeds better, is smoother, has better mags, and has a better trigger and bm. As much as I’d like the weight savings of the howa the down sides are to high and some of the issues are random. Bad feeding, trigger issues, bad stock fit, need to replace bottom metal, rough bolt cycling. If they would fix the issues and charge more I would try one. But for now a tikka at roughly 1lb heavier is worth it. Gun can be had for $650, $125 for muzzle threading, and a $400 stockys stock on a deal, at $1175total. Also you can get an ultralite contour barrel like the Howas and make the tikkas even lighter. I will say quite of few ppl I know run howa’s because they got them cheap. And after they’ve had a lot of rounds on them the bolt does smooth up some. And some of the older ones have smoother cycling bolts to start with.
I don’t think it makes sense to spend the time on a Howa superlite unless you’re trying to get under 7lbs with 30 ounces of scope and suppressor. And plan to rebarrel it so something that doesn’t recoil as much as the factory chamberings.
I have one in the works right now.
It wil be getting a 16” 6dasher, 6GT or 22creed barrel. Gun should be around 6.5-6.75lbs all in, with stockys, DIP metal bottom metal, Swfa 3x9 and DD Wolfhunter.
It has only made sense to me because of getting good deals on all components. I should be into the rifle for right at 1000.00 by the time I’m done with it (no scope or suppressor). Plus it will be in the chambering and twist rate I actually want.
it’s a hard sell at full prices and factory chamberings if you ask me