I have a 110 in .243 probably 15-20 years old. Havent shot it a lot. Is it worth getting a new trigger for deer hunting, likely 75-150 yard range?
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I have a 110 in .243 probably 15-20 years old. Havent shot it a lot. Is it worth getting a new trigger for deer hunting, likely 75-150 yard range?
What don't you like about the factory trigger?
That almost has to be a 3-screw, I'd simply adjust it if it were mine.
Just think could hold gun on target a little easier with a little lighter trigger.
My 110 in 30-06 was made in the early 80's. It's trigger pull maxed out a 6 lb trigger pull gauge. It shot fine from the bench or when braced, however where a quick or offhand shot was required it hurt accuracy. I finally changed to a Timney trigger - much better.
I never did any fancy hunting that required a better than average trigger. I would think it would be fine (I had an early 80s Ruger and that trigger was for sure not a target trigger to put it mildly)
Frankly from the positions I have been in I would be lucky to get a 3 inch group at 100 yds.
Good enough for minute of deer.
You can replace it with an aftermarket trigger and I am sure you would be happy with it. If you have a 3 screw trigger and you do not want to spend $80.00 to $100.00 on a new trigger, you could just adjust the existing trigger. You can replace the wire trigger spring and adjust the sear engaugement (if needed) and you would have a nice 3lb trigger (perhaps a little less). I replaced the spring on one of mine along with a couple of other tweeks and ended up with a 2.5lb trigger. It saved me some money and I got to learn something in the process. And best of all I didnt kill me or anyone else.
Good advice. Thank you.
Up until last week, there was an EXCELLENT article on the 110 trigger and how to adjust it in the articles printed in the "HOME" section of this web site. It had photo's and it explained things better than ANYTHING I ever saw anywhere. But POOF!! It's gone now. No reason why, it's just not there anymore. There are reviews of scopes and all kinds of things that are not Savage and have absolutely NOTHING to do with Savage, but that trigger atricle has been deleted. Too bad. It was a big help to a lot of people with the same question the OP asks here.
Check out the Sticky. Savage FAQ,s & Gunsmithing Article Links at the top of the 110 section.
Yep. You nailed it and that is where it has been moved to. Many THANKS Short Round. I looked through all of those articles at least four times and thought that I had just over looked it before I decided that it had been moved and by golly, it had been. And if you had not told us where to find it, I never would have found it. OKAY Mr. OP. Look there where short round says and check out that really neat article about the Savage triggers and how to adjust them before you go spending money on a replacement trigger. Those Savage triggers are darn good if you get them adjusted correctly.
Check the FAQ's ;-))
My old 116 has the original 3-screw trigger, and by using a lighter spring wire and some careful adjusting, I was able to get a crisp, consistent, and safe 2 lb. pull.
I'm a fan of the pre-accutriggers. I've tuned a couple down to 1.75 - 2 lbs and they're much nicer to shoot than the Timney's.
File, stone and polish the trigger and sear and change tension spring. I also drilled a hole for a over travel set-screw.
I have also been successful working with the standard Savage triggers, with the information that is readily available.
I have read that some people have installed a lighter spring wire and improved the three screw trigger that does not have a sear adjustment. Does anyone know WHERE that lighter spring wire came from? Who sells spring wire for pre acru- trigger Savage triggers?
Hardware store "orange or blue big box probably wont have it" should have some "piano wire" something around .045 diameter is what I bought many years ago. A dollar or two will get enough to make a boatload of trigger springs.
I have also heard of guys cutting up a spinner bait to get a piece.
^ Yes ^ wire from a spinner bait is .040". Works perfect.
If you want, send me a PM with your address and I will send you some piano wire. It's rusted, but will work fine. I've used it for several of these.
Many THANKS foxx, but let me check my local Ace hardware to see if they have some first and maybe save you from having to mess with mailing it. And I'll check my tackle box and measure the wire diameter on the spinner baits. But I don't recall those wires being spring steel. Unless my remember is broken like my wife says it is, I don't remember spinner wire being spring steel. If you bend them, they stay bent and that ain't gonna work for a spring. But I'll try it cause I can't get a little creep out of my trigger and I hate to have to buy a new trigger to fix a little creep.
Those wires will hold a bend if you BEND them at right angles, for example. But they also flex and return to original shape if you just put a little pressure on them.
A new spring won't fix creep. Creep comes from having too much travel in trigger where the sear and trigger engage.
Also, the spring for your trigger should not be made of spring steel. It needs to be made of whatever piano wire is made from. :)
I use .038 and .039 spring wire and they do great
Some creep comes from the need to stone the sear surface and the trigger step. I have fixed at least 2 stock triggers that had terrible creep, by adjusting the travel and stoning the surfaces.
Hobby shops that sell model airplanes and building supplies will have piano wire in all sizes. Also have piano wire bending tools.
Yep. You are excatly correct, but I thought it would be worth a try before spending a hundred bucks or so for a new trigger. I may just chuck that trigger up in my drill press and drill a hole through it right opposite the sear and tap it for a headless screw like the 5 screw triggers have so I can adjust the sear engagement and THEN if I screw that up, I'll just buy a new adjustable trigger. Anyway, many THANKS to all of you guys for the advice and offers of help. This is what makes this forum so good. You boys know your stuff and you share what you know.Quote:
Quote foxx: A new spring won't fix creep. Creep comes from having too much travel in trigger where the sear and trigger engage.
Might be easier to shim the top of the trigger. There is a thread or article about that somewhere here as well.
Thanks. I found that video here -->> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJij...FWXqg9&index=3
Here is my question about that whole procedure: How hard is the shim stock he is using? If it is not hard, the pressure of the sear on it will wear it fairly quickly. I'm not a gunsmith, but I don't think I want to use that method, although it may work well for some people, and it will work for anyone for however long it will work. I question how long that time will be. I want parts that work against each other to be hard so that they wear slowly, if at all. That way, I only have to do it once in my lifetime.
But as always, thanks for that because I had not seen it before. None of this is a big deal because I got a Savage 110 rifle (flat back) in a trade recently. I never owned a Savage rifle before but have used Savage model 24's since I was 10 and I am now 74, so I've been shooting and hunting with them for awhile now. I'm going to have one or more of those here until I die. I shot the trade rifle ( a 243) and it shot well enough with bullets of 90 grains or below, but it would not stabilize the 100 or 105 grain bullets I have always shot in a 243. So I sent it to E. Aurther Brown and had them install one of their accuracy barrels with a 1 in 8 twist on it. That only took two weeks from start to finish BTW.
The rifle came in the trade with a set of bases and rings on it, but the guy told me that they came from his "parts box" and they may not work. One ring was a different brand than the other, but they were both 1 inch, so I figured I'd just try them anyway. Well those bases were not made for a flat back action, so the scope was cocked in them and they are not going to work. I'm waiting on a new set of bases and rings to get here to install a new Vortex 6 X 18 scope to see if the new Brown & company barrel will shoot. Got a bunch of test loads worked up for it already. The rings and bases should get here about Thursday.
So that gives me time to get that tiny bit of creep out of the trigger. It really isn't bad, but any creep at all is a bother to a real rifleman, so I'm trying to eliminate it. It'sa project to mess with while I'm waiting for hunting season to open. I appreciate you boys help with this cause like I said, I have not owned a Savage before. I've done about a dozen modle 70 Win. triggers, but they are simple and easy to work on.
I performed the shim trigger mod on a Axis and for the shim I used a section of the correct feeler gauge. By the way it cut I assumed that it was plenty hard and would survive the test of time.
^^^^ yeah, it would not have to be very hard. There is almost no pressure applied to it. My guess is a piece of plastic would work for 1,000's or shots and 100's of years. Still, I would and always have) use hard metal for the shim.
I messed with that trigger a little today. Installed a shim which fit fine before the glue but was to thick to stay cocked with the glue so I had to take it out. Then as I was cleaning off the glue, did a little polish on the trigger bearing surface but didn't touch the sear. To my amazement, the creep disappeared. Then I tried to fire it with the safety on and it did fire so I had to adjust the safety. When it held, then I Bump tested it with the safety off and could not make it fire. Then I worked the bolt fast and it held. So now the trigger is between four and five pounds with no creep and that is just where I like triggers to be on hunting rifles. I have never used a trigger lighter than four pounds because that is what the NRA always required on pistol matches and because cold fingers and light triggers don't go together very well. Since I am a hunter and not a target shooter, I am gonna be in the cold.
Thanks to you boys for the guidance you provided on that trigger. It is perfect for how I shoot right now. The scope bases arrived today and Midway sez the rings will arrive tomorrow. Soon as that happens I'll mount and bore sight it and be ready to see if that E. Arthur Brown barrel will shoot. I already have my test loads worked up.
Another way to "shim" one is a little trick I used when I couldn't find a 3 screw available in a timely fashion. First I protect the face of the sear mating surface and build up the desired area with just a little bead from a wire welder, Then slowly file it down testing along the way until you get the desired engagement. Wont ever come loose or slip :)
Works like a champ.
http://i64.tinypic.com/10ggrva.jpg
Well with the new 26 inch E-Arthur Brown accuracy barrel installed and the Vortex 6 X 18 X 44 AO scope, this thing came out long and heavy. I have my test loads loaded with 100 grain Sierra SMK BTSP and also some Berger 105 grain BTHP VLD bullets. I'll get to the range Monday and see how all of this shoots.
Again, thanks to you boys for the help on the trigger. It's working fine now. If it shoots worth keeping, I'll install a long bolt handle and a shooting sling and call it done.
My best group so far has been 7/16 th of an inch when loaded with 45 grains of RL-26 under a Berger 105 VLD bullet seated to just kiss the lands. But the trigger was terrible so I decided to try the cure you fellas recommended. Now the trigger is between 3.5 and 4 pounds which is excellent. It had been 6 pounds before the spinner bait fix it.
http://i66.tinypic.com/zjt8xw.jpg
Original trigger spring
http://i68.tinypic.com/x1hw83.jpg
It measures .0630 in diameter. It's pretty stout.
http://i66.tinypic.com/ht5we8.jpg
Here is the new spring I cut from a buzz bait and it measures .0510. Various people have recommended a .0490 diameter, but I ain't got onena them in my tackle box, so this'll have to do.
http://i66.tinypic.com/2uh3l2b.jpg
Heavier original spring above and my copy of it below.
http://i65.tinypic.com/v4z5mt.jpg
Lighter .0510 spring installed and adjusted. Trigger tested for bump off and safety function. Trigger pull weight is now between3.5 and 4 pounds with no creep which is excellent. I am going to load up sum more cartridges this afternoon and go give'm a try with this new trigger. I may getta 3/8 inch group outta that dang Savage yet.
It's still there on page 8 http://www.savageshooters.com/conten...ger-Adjustment
Now for a simple adjustment for the pre accutrigger 10/110 models https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QeHuejolf6E
Hey SS, You need to tighten down that adjustment screw a little until you put at least a slight arch in that trigger spring you replaced, or you or someone around you is quite likely to have a very very bad day. Not having an arch in it with sufficient tension can keep the trigger from returning to the correct position resulting in really "Sketchy" sear to trigger engagement. That spring not only controls the weight it takes to pull the trigger, it also returns the trigger forward so that when the rifle is cocked the trigger and the boltstop/sear combo fully engage. Best case it may not stay cocked when the bolt is lifted, worst case is it slightly engages just enough to cock but without enough engagement that may slip and result in a negligent discharge and an unintentional hole in whatever the rifle is pointed at.
Just a cautionary word of advice, and this time it's worth far more than what you paid to read it.
Also be sure the spring is engaged in one of the adjustment screw cutouts. That's what they are there for and it's not by accident.
Good luck and stay safe.
That video is useless. It's supposed to show you how to "tune" your pre-Accutrigger but all the guy shows you is how to increase your trigger pull weight an he doesn't even know the correct terminology! He leaves out any mention of the sear engagement screw adjustment or the over travel adjustment; let alone adjustments to the safety!
I'm trying to figure out how to adjust mine but the online research I've done has already shown how inadequate and potentially dangerous this video can be.
Here's an authoritative article on adjusting the pre-Acutrigger trigger: http://www.varminthunters.com/tech/s...10trigger.html
I'm still looking for a quality video instruction because I have an easier time learning from watching a video.
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I use SSS triggers and have a 3 screw Savage trigger that I worked on. With any Savage trigger work be aware: THE SAFE DOES NOT BLOCK THE FIRING PIN OR DISCONNECT THE SEAR, it is only a mechanical device that blocks the trigger. ALWAYS CHECK FOR "BUMP OFF" and include checking by pulling trigger with safe ON and then pushing the safe OFF. That is where the Rem 700's had a problem.
"KEEP IT POINTED IN A SAFE DIRECTION, WHEN IT GOES OFF ACCIDENTALLY(and sometime it will) NOBODY GETS HURT"