Two stage trigger vs creepy single stage trigger

Went back to no creep on my SRS-A1 trigger (actually a hairline creep that is the minimum). Tried with several millimeters of creep to simulate first stage but it was not consistent like the TRG trigger so no creep.
 
Umm yeah that's all personal preference.

Another vote for the two stage.

I have no preference one way or the other. the quality of the second or only stage is all that matters.

No creep. Very little overtravel Consistent release weight, right weight for your purpose (I like 2lbs because it is light enough for target but tough enough to not blow through accidentally when moving and shooting/PRS and changing position drills.

Jewell is my fav, my rem 40x is truly excellent and the savage I just bought is very reasonable. The 2 stage on my B&T APR is better but at no point do I feel the need to upgrade the sav. Factory rems were not acceptable to me and neither were the Rugers. Too much creep and highly variable release weights. (almost certainly due to creep).

I've also played with but never owned browning single set trigger that was surprisingly good.
 
Last edited:
My first hunting rifle had somewhat of a two stage trigger. It was an old surplus husqvarna. It definitely had free travel and broke clean repeatedly and it worked very well for hunting, but I couldn't imagine using it for target. I would say a two stage has its place in the world for prs and maybe moving targets, but I couldn't imagine shooting target with anything more than a few ounce trigger pull.

What kind of pull weight do you guys set your two stage triggers up to and what are you using them for?
 
Love the 2 stage triggers on my Anschutz .22's BUT the Walther single stage is incredible, it makes the Annie's feel lacking.

Hunting guns are all single stage 5 lb. Varmint guns are <2lbs, Target guns are in the sub lb range.

Triggers are like calibers... there is no 'one size fits all' it boils down to preference, and intended use.
 
Back
Top Bottom