I don't mind them, what I do not like is the fact than on most of them when your adjusted for a pull weight of under 2 pounds and you close the bolt hard the sear will slip. the safety blade catches it yes but having to recock it is a pain. I have plenty of other triggers in the 1.5 to 2 pound range and they do not do this. no creep either.
The accutrigger ALMOST cost me the buck of my lifetime last month. I have taken 3 previous bucks with my 220 with no trigger problems. I never heard of issues before. I rarely do but I was wearing light fleece gloves. Imagine the feeling of trying to squeeze off a broadside rested 25yard shot when you suddenly realize you have 20 lbs of pressure on the trigger and still no bang. As if it was jammed or safety is on. By the time I double checked that the safety was off the animal was spooked and it became a bit of a sh!t show but thankfully the gun eventually fired and he dropped. I'll likely change the trigger but being aware of the potential problem is a help. No gloves. Be sure to square up on the trigger.
I don't know about pulling on the side but I didn't have to recock. Maybe the fleece jammed in the trigger? There was no time for buck fever as everything went down too fast to get shakey. I think I'd just prefer a trigger that always releases the sear when I pull on it.ya pulled on the side of the trigger didn't ya ? Had to re-#### the bolt eh ? Sounds like a combination of not fully knowing your weapon and buck fever to me... unless I missed something. Glad you got em though.
I don't know about pulling on the side but I didn't have to recock. Maybe the fleece jammed in the trigger? There was no time for buck fever as everything went down too fast to get shakey. I think I'd just prefer a trigger that always releases the sear when I pull on it.
huh.... now that's interesting ...
Usually on these blade safety style triggers if you pull the trigger back on right or left side (without pulling the blade back) it disengages the trigger and obviously won't fire no matter how hard you pull.... which means you have to re-#### it.
Be interesting to know exactly what happened to yours then.
So your saying you now had to pull back really hard and it eventually fired ? Didn't have to do anything else ?
This is interesting indeed. I am familiar with the behavior you describe, but not firing then firing without recocking the gun almost sounds like an issue with the safety not the trigger... or as mentioned maybe his glove got stuck in the blade or something...
I don't believe the safety was the problem as I double checked it and it was already all the way forward. On my next attempt to shoot the gun fired with normal trigger pressure. I think the blade was jammed or not depressed due to the glove. Not a good hunting trigger imo.
Make a trigger so shoddily that it's unsafe. Add a little dingus so that hazard is replaced by unreliability. Add "Accu" to it's name. Profit.
Genius.





























