![]() |
Remington 700 trigger
I tired to look this up, but had no luck. I have a remington 700 in .30-06. I am wondering how many pounds the factorytrigger pull is on it. I looked and could find no definate answer. I am looking at a coupledifferent aftermarket triggers. any suggestions would be great!
thanks -Jake |
RE: Remington 700 trigger
Mine felt like about 8 lbs. I put in a timney and now it break at about 3 lbs, real sweet trigger. Easy to install, I did it myself in about 30 minutes ( my first experience with a trigger replacement).
|
RE: Remington 700 trigger
I have heard that they're a minimum of 7-8 lbs from the factory. I had mine adjusted via an Ebay trigger-job gunsmith (no longer listed). Took it down to about 2-3 lbs and was a huge difference in accuracy as a result. The new Remington X-Mark Pro trigger is awesome as well. I have one and really like it. Breaks easy & light.
|
RE: Remington 700 trigger
alright thanks! I know it is pretty heavy, I can shoot pretty well with it. But A lighter trigger would be much better.
|
RE: Remington 700 trigger
Gunsmith at Gander Mountain told me theyare any where from 6-9 pounds. the trigger on a 700 is adjustable. I had mine set at 3.5 pounds (good for hunting)and he took all the creep out of it and it is a very nice trigger now. You canalso adjustit yourself.
|
RE: Remington 700 trigger
My gunsmith told me that it is factory policy to ship them minimum of 7lbs, even though it can be adjusted lower. The factory will not accept liablity though for anything less than 3lbs, so some gunsmiths will not lighten it below that. You have the option of replacing it with another, though there is no need. Remington makes one of the best factory tiggers on the market, and they can be adjusted to break light and clean. I would look into a $30 trigger job before shelling out the money for a new one. Just a thought.
Good luck. |
RE: Remington 700 trigger
I agree with kdvollmer. Remington makes one of the best triggers on any factory weapon. The trigger comes pre-set at 7+ lbs due to liability issues. Do a search on the net and you will find many sites that have detailed instructions on how to adjust it. If you don't feel comfortable doing it yourself, bring it to a decent smith and for about $30 he can easily remove all creep and overtravel and have your trigger breaking at a clean 3 lbs in about 10 minutes. If you decide to do it yourself, make sure to follow any and all safety tests to ensure that your gun will not accidentally discharge. Good luck.
|
RE: Remington 700 trigger
I tired to look this up, but had no luck. I have a remington 700 in .30-06. I am wondering how many pounds the factorytrigger pull is on it. I looked and could find no definate answer. I am looking at a coupledifferent aftermarket triggers. any suggestions would be great! thanks First of all the factory trigger can easily be adjusted to a 3lb pull without any hassle. The factory triggers on the last 2 I have purchased have been in the 4 1/2 -5 lb range. Yes they were measured on the latest greatest RCBS pull gauge. They had the overtravel and sear set about perfect so all I had to do was turn out the weight screw to 3 lbs. Timney trigger is no better or worse then the factory trigger. They go bad as well and I have sent one back this year for a weatherby vanguard which didn't have the internal parts hardened correctly. Call Brownells and ask them the return rate on the them. If I were going to buy the best trigger for a Remington it would be a Jewell and next a Rifle Basix or X mark pro trigger. For 98% of use the regular factory trigger is good enough. |
RE: Remington 700 trigger
http://www.snipercountry.com/Articles/RemingtonTriggers.asp
That link is a pretty good guide to adjusting your own Remmy trigger. |
RE: Remington 700 trigger
As far as the Remington factory trigger being OK, that would depend on what year said Remington was made. At one time they had one of the worst (and most dangerous) triggers on the market. If your 700 is new, the trigger should be fine, but if it was made back in the '70s, (or prior to 1975)a replacement would be a good thing. Look up the "walker fire control system".
|
RE: Remington 700 trigger
Remington trigger design is unchanged until the New Xmark pro trigger was introduced. All they did to alleviate the safety concern was to allow the bolt handle to be moved while in the safety position. All they did was grind the ear off the safety lever.
|
RE: Remington 700 trigger
My cousin has a m700. It is the tactical model with the HS stock and Try-nite coating on SS barrel. his gunsmith told him it has a new trigger that Remington just switched to. Supposedly it is not adjustable from the factory. I am not sure and very well could be misleading you. Any way, he went with a Jewel trigger and has it adjusted down so low that I think a stiff breeze would set it off. I'm not sure, but feels less than a pound to me. He doesn't plan to hunt with this rifle. Just a long range shooter.
|
RE: Remington 700 trigger
ORIGINAL: oldelkhunter I tired to look this up, but had no luck. I have a remington 700 in .30-06. I am wondering how many pounds the factorytrigger pull is on it. I looked and could find no definate answer. I am looking at a coupledifferent aftermarket triggers. any suggestions would be great! thanks First of all the factory trigger can easily be adjusted to a 3lb pull without any hassle. The factory triggers on the last 2 I have purchased have been in the 4 1/2 -5 lb range. Yes they were measured on the latest greatest RCBS pull gauge. They had the overtravel and sear set about perfect so all I had to do was turn out the weight screw to 3 lbs. Timney trigger is no better or worse then the factory trigger. They go bad as well and I have sent one back this year for a weatherby vanguard which didn't have the internal parts hardened correctly. Call Brownells and ask them the return rate on the them. If I were going to buy the best trigger for a Remington it would be a Jewell and next a Rifle Basix or X mark pro trigger. For 98% of use the regular factory trigger is good enough. |
| All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:51 AM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.