Rifle ice/snow freeze eval 2025

Formidilosus

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2025’s ice and snow comparison/reliability eval between rifles/actions/triggers. As last year, this is not a “test”, it is just a view at what generally happens. Doing a legitimate test requires more rifles and consistent conditions than I have. So…


The rifles:

1). Tikka T3 in Rokstok

2). MRC in wood Rokstok

3). R700 short action, factory trigger

4). BAT Hammer Head with Bix N Andy Tacsport trigger in chassis

1736627843898.jpeg


This will be done in multiple steps, from near worst case working back to easy- to see any differences that show themselves. Every rifle is started in exactly the same condition- empty chamber, closed bolt, safety on, magazine loaded and/or inserted.



1). 4 ounces of water were poured from the top onto the action and trigger, then dropped into the snow. Temp is 31° F.

IMG_4290.jpeg



MRC getting washed-
IMG_4288.jpeg


Update: January 13th

The temps on the 11th and 12th got above freezing during the day, and below at night. This morning it was below freezing.

Rifles as pulled from snow-
IMG_4341.jpeg

Backside-
IMG_4356.jpeg



The rifle with the most snow/ice stuck on it was the MRC. The Tikka had the second most, then R700, with the BAT having the least on the outside- however the fluting and open ports everywhere did allow snow and ice to get in as much or more than the others.


Results:

Tikka- factory trigger:
fed and functioned without issue. Fired first time. Magazine was slightly stuck due to ice, took a smack on the bottom and a little pulling to get out.

MRC- factory trigger: Fed and functioned without issue Fired first time. Bolt opening was slightly stiff on first try- cleared after the initial opening. Magazine slightly stuck due to ice, however easy to remove with the baseplate of the AICS mag.

R700- factory trigger: Feeding, feeding extracting, and ejecting was fine. Trigger was completely dead for 30’ish tries of racking the bolt, manipulating the safety, etc. Took about 30 seconds and two goes at it to get it to function. First time the firing pin fell it was extremely weak. After a couple dryfires, it started firing correctly.


BAT HH- Bixn-Andy TacSport:
Fed, extracted, and ejected fine. Trigger was totally dead. Zero engagement, and no amount of cycling, safety manipulation, banging, etc. fixed it. 5’ish minutes of working with it to no avail. Took 7 minutes at 66° F inside to finally get the trigger to do anything. Once it started releasing, it took 5-6 dryfires to get enough force on the firing pin that I believe it would have fired. Still sluggish firing pin movement.

After going through each initially, I went back and videoed each-

 
Last edited:

Gstew1930

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This is awesome. I have a question and this isn't me talking shit. It's a genuine question. The MRC when the trigger is fired it looked like the bolt would bounce. Is that normal & would it affect anything?
 

SloppyJ

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Whats the design issue with the R700 that causes them to freeze up? I assume we can interchange the MRC and a M70? I remember reading the last feeeze test and the M70 worked as well.

Does the MRC have the drop in style "MOA" type triggers of the new M70s?
 
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Formidilosus

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This is awesome. I have a question and this isn't me talking shit. It's a genuine question. The MRC when the trigger is fired it looked like the bolt would bounce. Is that normal & would it affect anything?

Yes that’s normal, and had no effect. Most rifles do it to some extent.


Whats the design issue with the R700 that causes them to freeze up?

Sear design that makes the required trigger design far less reliable than other rifles.


I assume we can interchange the MRC and a M70? I remember reading the last feeeze test and the M70 worked as well.

The old style M70 trigger adjusted correctly is very reliable.


Does the MRC have the drop in style "MOA" type triggers of the new M70s?


No MOA. It uses a Pre64 M70 trigger adjusted correctly
 
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Formidilosus

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Do you think a Timney in the R700 would be any better?

No. From a reliability (not safety standpoint) Timneys are about the same as a well adjusted factory trigger- they are better at not firing when the safety is taken off.

The only R700 compatible triggers that are any improvement in reliability and safety are the Geissele Super 700 and the XSTP Mod 22 trigger- both incidentally are two stage triggers. The R700 trigger design is compromised from the start- it is an inherent problem that cannot be completely fixed regardless of trigger.
 

ElPollo

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No. From a reliability (not safety standpoint) Timneys are about the same as a well adjusted factory trigger- they are better at not firing when the safety is taken off.

The only R700 compatible triggers that are any improvement in reliability and safety are the Geissele Super 700 and the XSTP Mod 22 trigger- both incidentally are two stage triggers. The R700 trigger design is compromised from the start- it is an inherent problem that cannot be completely fixed regardless of trigger.
What about the David Tubbs trigger? Any experience with that one?
 

Maverick1

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"R700- factory trigger: Feeding, feeding extracting, and ejecting was fine. Trigger was completely dead for 30’ish tries of racking the bolt, manipulating the safety, etc. Took about 30 seconds and two goes at it to get it to function. First time the firing pin fell it was extremely weak. After a couple dryfires, it started firing correctly."

So, it performed like it usually does - - - even under normal atmospheric conditions? :LOL::ROFLMAO::LOL:
 

ElPollo

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Not in snow and ice. In sand and dust the but that I have used it, it seemed better than most.
Thanks, Form. Appreciate all you bring to this forum. Would also love to see this done with one of the new tikka rough tech versions with the fluted bolt. I see that as at best a cosmetic thing and at worst as a pathway for ingress of debris and potential reliability issues.
 

mxgsfmdpx

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Thanks, Form. Appreciate all you bring to this forum. Would also love to see this done with one of the new tikka rough tech versions with the fluted bolt. I see that as at best a cosmetic thing and at worst as a pathway for ingress of debris and potential reliability issues.
I haven't done this for ice and snow but in heavy wind/coarse sand and fine dust they've function as expected. The BATs that were ran side by side in these conditions didn't fare as well as the fluted and coated Tikkas. As to not fully deviate from the main topic here, I can answer PM's on this specifically if needed.
 
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Formidilosus

Formidilosus

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Thanks, Form. Appreciate all you bring to this forum. Would also love to see this done with one of the new tikka rough tech versions with the fluted bolt. I see that as at best a cosmetic thing and at worst as a pathway for ingress of debris and potential reliability issues.

Fluted bolts as most are done do allow for more debris to enter the action. They still work well- they’re still a Tikka, but they do allow more in than a standard bolt. As far as that goes, the original T3 with smaller ejection port is “better” than the T3x.
 

Qholum37

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This is a pretty cool test! Last year I got a nice blacktail buck in the middle of the worst storm we had all winter. It always likes to snow here then turn to freezing rain and my Tikka was covered in ice but still went bang! The bolt was iced up, probably wouldn't have been able to change magnification if I tried and the barrel and stock were joined as one with solid ice.
 
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