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Rebarrel vs buy a Tikka

I like Ruger's! I have an old tang safety 30-06 that I have had great history with but the trigger needs help. I'll check out Wolf springs when the knee surgery is over and I can get around.
Our weather just started to turn to ice pellets and some snow flakes just started falling right before it got too dark to see.
I hope you have a great hunt stdt7mag.
I had a Ruger M77 270 with the tang safety. It was a very good rifle but the trigger, like yours, needed some help. The last M77 i got in I ended up changing out springs and honing/polishing the internals to fix the trigger pull but it was a slow, tedious process.
 
Yep the Mark series are way easier I am told. But I have a lot of history with this old Ruger. Killed my first Elk with it and many after that, had to have the barrel replaced and man it shot so much better. I'll never sell that rifle.
I botched a bedding job in mine as a teenager. Stupid is as stupid does and I was stupid. Later I needed some money and sold it. I killed a trainload of deer with that rifle and won many of our little unknown distance $5 ante Sunday evening neighborhood shootouts. It was a cold bore killer. I really wish I had it back. I later bought one of their polymer cutout stocked stainless rifles but I never could warm up to it. Sold it and got a Model 70 Sporter in 270. I won't ever sell or part with it.

Rugers to me seem to give a bit more felt recoil due mainly to their stock dimensions and my physical characteristics. I get this with some of the Tikka's as well. I like to put a good recoil pad on them and cut somewhere between 1/8-1/4 inch of pitch into the stock. Or add a pitch spacer. Cuts way down on cheek slap and muzzle rise.
 
I wonder how the mountain tactical spring is? There are other items that I might want to buy from their website is why I asked.
Got the M-Carbo trigger spring in and took less than 3 minutes to replace it. Be careful! The replacement spring from M-Carbo is small and I dropped it as soon as I opened it and looked for 10 minutes to find it. That was the longest part of the whole job.
Also some use a screw driver and cross thread the screw into the threads. Don't shortcut it by not removing the trigger assembly as it is easy to cross thread it they say. Mine went fine and even though I thought I wanted a 2 pound trigger I was happy with a 1 pound 6 oz trigger pull.
Let me know how your Mountain Tactical trigger spring does.
 
Got the M-Carbo trigger spring in and took less than 3 minutes to replace it. Be careful! The replacement spring from M-Carbo is small and I dropped it as soon as I opened it and looked for 10 minutes to find it. That was the longest part of the whole job.
Also some use a screw driver and cross thread the screw into the threads. Don't shortcut it by not removing the trigger assembly as it is easy to cross thread it they say. Mine went fine and even though I thought I wanted a 2 pound trigger I was happy with a 1 pound 6 oz trigger pull.
Let me know how your Mountain Tactical trigger spring does.
Well, I ended up ordering from a guy on Accurate Shooter….
 
If you put a spring in it do 2 things after

1. Drop it on the butt on an empty chamber and make sure it's still drop safe

2. Blue loctite on the big trigger screw
 
Anytime I mess with a trigger my first rule is to loctite any set screw unless it's a detent type screw under spring pressure like on Triggertech triggers. This is particularly important with Walker type Remington triggers. I'll then pound the recoil pad down on a table or floor or hit it a few times with a dead blow hammer or mallet both with the safety off and on. I'll also work the bolt vigorously several times while dry firing
to make sure the hammer didn't fall during the cycle. Work the safety on and off vigorously as well. I've seen many of the old Walkers vibrate loose from firing and become dangerous after a novice trigger job.

At one time I had done several standard Savage Triggers with good success. I guess I got a bit too confident and did one that I tested and it passed everything I threw at it. The next day I went to zero the rifle and the hammer fell when I cycled the bolt on an empty chamber thank goodness. Now if anyone wants trigger work on a Savage non accu trigger the only option I offer is replacement with a Timney. I learned my lesson on that one.
 
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