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The Range
Rimfire Weapons
Ruger MKIII gunsmith in OKC
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<blockquote data-quote="_CY_" data-source="post: 1274212" data-attributes="member: 7629"><p>shouldn't be nothing for a certified diesel tech to do a trigger job and smooth things out. </p><p></p><p>seriously anyone that can take apart a cummins turbo diesel and put it back together.... a Ruger MK III is nothing compared to complexity of a cummins. </p><p></p><p>first trigger jobs should require no parts ... slowing stoning sear without changing angles is a breeze. amazing how much difference simply stoning all internal parts that rubs against anything makes.</p><p></p><p>no need to spend $$$ on parts unnecessarily ... most stock triggers can be improved considerably without changing sear angles. a smooth trigger is more important than a light one. as your skills progress, you will get both a light and smooth trigger. </p><p></p><p>what it does take is a small investment in tools. minimum list would include a gunsmith punch set, gunsmith screwdriver set and fine grain stones.</p><p></p><p>that said, if a brand new Ruger MK III target was not performing reliably for me ... I'd be calling up Ruger and requesting a UPS pickup.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="_CY_, post: 1274212, member: 7629"] shouldn't be nothing for a certified diesel tech to do a trigger job and smooth things out. seriously anyone that can take apart a cummins turbo diesel and put it back together.... a Ruger MK III is nothing compared to complexity of a cummins. first trigger jobs should require no parts ... slowing stoning sear without changing angles is a breeze. amazing how much difference simply stoning all internal parts that rubs against anything makes. no need to spend $$$ on parts unnecessarily ... most stock triggers can be improved considerably without changing sear angles. a smooth trigger is more important than a light one. as your skills progress, you will get both a light and smooth trigger. what it does take is a small investment in tools. minimum list would include a gunsmith punch set, gunsmith screwdriver set and fine grain stones. that said, if a brand new Ruger MK III target was not performing reliably for me ... I'd be calling up Ruger and requesting a UPS pickup. [/QUOTE]
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