Do you really need to drop $300ish on a trigger? Have you tried the trigger mod? I found it to be simple and drop the weight by more than half.
IMO I laugh at those selling their 1k+ rimfires. If you dropped that much on a gun, shouldnt it be an awesome gun that you wouldnt sell?
All guns sell... tough for a newbie to understand but time will take care of that... of dozens of rifles I own, there are only two that won't ever sell... and that is only for sentimental reasons, not for what I put into them... its just a gun and this is just a hobby... there will always be more guns and new guns and we will always be tweaking them... that's half the fun... shooting them is the other half.
I disagree, little_airwolf has a valid point which most don't seem to understand. The time and resources spent creating such a rifle would indicate that such rifle is ideal, perfect, or otherwise purpose built. So where does this belief that "all guns sell..?" I suspect it comes from not having any defined role or purpose for said firearm, and having little desire to improve ones abilities. I've invested significant resources into most of my firearms, and none of them are for sale. Then again, I have defined roles for all of mine.
TDC
Everyone who builds a gun has a concept and/or purpose... who can judge another persons values... I have a friend who has built a couple dozen rifles... he doesn't shoot... he sells them all unfired... he just loves building... sometimes he gets his money back and sometimes he doesn't... but he feels it is money well spent for a pass time that he enjoys... who can say that is "wrong." For me builds are for interests sake to try out a specific goal or purpose... for many, I have a specific goal or general duration in mind... when the purpose is done the gun gets sold and I move on to the next project... and someone else gets a nice gun the easy way. This is no different than building a gun for a specific sheep hunt or African safari and then selling it when the hunt is over... the purpose of the gun is usually not indefinite... and even when the purpose remains, there is more than one way to skin a cat, and most shooters like variety... and who can say that these folks (I include myself) are not, at the same time, improving skills... not everyone who shoots is chasing "itty bitty" groups... some are plinkers, or hunters or other sorts of recreational shooters...

I'm not saying aftermarket trigger groups aren't get. I'm just saying, why not mod your own trigger and see if that works for you. Wouldn't $300+ be better spent on other things?
Yes, if your competing, any advantage is great.
Everyone who builds a gun has a concept and/or purpose... who can judge another persons values... I have a friend who has built a couple dozen rifles... he doesn't shoot... he sells them all unfired... he just loves building... sometimes he gets his money back and sometimes he doesn't... but he feels it is money well spent for a pass time that he enjoys... who can say that is "wrong." For me builds are for interests sake to try out a specific goal or purpose... for many, I have a specific goal or general duration in mind... when the purpose is done the gun gets sold and I move on to the next project... and someone else gets a nice gun the easy way. This is no different than building a gun for a specific sheep hunt or African safari and then selling it when the hunt is over... the purpose of the gun is usually not indefinite... and even when the purpose remains, there is more than one way to skin a cat, and most shooters like variety... and who can say that these folks (I include myself) are not, at the same time, improving skills... not everyone who shoots is chasing "itty bitty" groups... some are plinkers, or hunters or other sorts of recreational shooters...
I don't disagree, but a person who builds then sells is not a shooter, they're a hobbyist. I doubt most here are like your friend and build as a pass time. The lack of direction and/or purpose is what drives most of the mods and sales of such gear. Maybe I'm the odd one out, but I find shooting far more entertaining and productive than assembling/building the firearm. Carpenters use their tools, they don't collect them..
TDC
I don't disagree, but a person who builds then sells is not a shooter, they're a hobbyist. I doubt most here are like your friend and build as a pass time. The lack of direction and/or purpose is what drives most of the mods and sales of such gear. Maybe I'm the odd one out, but I find shooting far more entertaining and productive than assembling/building the firearm. Carpenters use their tools, they don't collect them..
TDC
I'm not saying aftermarket trigger groups aren't get. I'm just saying, why not mod your own trigger and see if that works for you. Wouldn't $300+ be better spent on other things?
Yes, if your competing, any advantage is great.
Hoytcanon, out of the triggers you mentioned, do you have a clear favorite? Everything I've read so far points towards Kidd, but the availability doesn't seem to be there.



























