Great can't wait, I just got a hard on.........
Kidd product coming soon![]()
Well, the fully assembled trigger groups are nice as a drop-in solution, but if you buy the Voquartsen (correct spelling?) trigger tune up kit which contains a new hammer and all the springs, you can have a very decent & extremely light 10/22 trigger for like 30$ (very easy to install too). Add a 5$ bolt buffer to compensate for the already nearly non-existent recoil of a 10/22 and you've got a tack driver.
I find it funny how some people will spend hundreds of bucks on all those tricked out 10/22 parts when simple modifications to their existing equipment will yield the same effects. My modified stock 10/22 trigger is so light that sometimes I pull too early when aiming (whenever I forget how light it is in comparison with my other guns, lol - probably like 1 lb or so). The procedure is also fully reversible, of course... you can uninstall it and transfer the kit to another gun (so keep all your stock parts).
Just my .02...
P.S. I got all my stuff from these guys here... very good service and fast USPS shipping to Canada: ht tp://hawktecharms.com/
I took apart and polished my trigger as per the instructions on rimfirecentral and got rid of the terrible creep my latest-gen 10/22 had. All I want now is to lower the pull down to a decent level for target shooting. Anywhere between 2.5 - 3.5 lbs would suit me just fine.
From what I've read, a $40 VQ hammer will do the trick for me!
I bought one and it did the trick for me.
I took my steel 10/22 trigger group to the extreme with spending the least amount of money possible. Cost me 10 bucks for a role of fine grit sand paper and some devoted time. My 10/22 cycles every ammo without jams. Dont spend your money unless it is a volq extractor, my trigger pull weight is at 2 pounds. All I did was thoroughly polish all the internals (including the pins) sanded the paint out of the upper receiver, polished the bolt, changed the plunger spring to a pen spring (still resets but lightened the plunger) and sanded the hammer sear (I think thats the name of it) slightly. Now my 10/22 cycles perfectly and the trigger weight is really crisp and light as well. Total cost, 12 for the extractor, 10 for the sand paper, and 5 for a file. Save your money and put it to a good barrel.