To address the trigger issue-
There are two separate things being mixed together it seems- drop safety, and reliability in adverse weather conditions. As for drop safety, the only trigger that is R700 compatible that will pass a standard drop of 5 feet on the butt and not fire is the Geissle military only MK13 trigger. The Geissele Super 700 is a similar derivative, however is not the same. Most R700 triggers will fire with a drop of just a couple of feet. For those that will ask- yes, Tikka and Sako pass the 5 foot drop fine.
Now for adverse weather reliability-
I am not, nor have I stated that all Remington based triggers fail every time and can not be used to kill animals. It is a fact that Remington based trigger systems are more susceptible to failure or issues than other triggers systems in adverse weather. That is, that they are more likely to suffer issues in adverse weather than other trigger systems used in the same conductions. The freeze thing I did that has been linked, shows that clearly- the Trigger Tech gave much more problems than the Tikka or Sako. This is not some conspiracy thing. My life would be so much easier if someone made a trigger for R700’s that work right. ARC actions are some of, if not the best designed actions on the market, but the trigger system is a hindrance that I am not willing to suffer.
I average 40-60 days of shooting in “extreme” winter weather a year. I and others with be using R700 based guns with a variety of triggers, right beside guns using Sako/Tikka triggers, AI’s, etc. R700 trigger have vastly more issues than the others. It’s so obvious that people saying they haven’t seen it, I really would have to question how much shooting in snow and ice they do that isn’t on a range.
One gun using a Remington based trigger so far this year hunting in a few days of snow and slush- twice it had to be heated up by the stove to get it to function. The Tikkas and Sako carried beside it functioned fine. One rifle with a Trigger Tech used last year hunting, and it failed to fire once from snow.
I am not an engineer and I don’t really care why, however I have been told by several manufacturers that it is a problem endemic to how the trigger system works, and that no matter what is done it will always be more susceptible to dust/sand/ice/snow than others trigger systems.
Trigger Techs are not immune or even all that great in dust/sand, nor in freezing rain and snow. They certainly can be used, but the reliability problems of R700 based triggers is not some secret.
@Ryan Avery how many TT’s or other triggers have you seen fail or given problems in the last couple of years?