It didn't cost that much.Ĭlick to expand.I wouldn't give this nearly as much credibility except that the engineer who designed and oversaw the production of the thing admitted it had safety issues and could fire unintentionally. This is why I had a qualified gunsmith do mine. The trigger adjustment screws are concealed in the trigger assembly and one cannot tell which screw does what, unlike the Savage 110 which I set myself. I'd bet most of these incidents involved triggers which Bubba tried to set. So, my guns are good and I'm not paranoid. The round fits tight in the chamber and causes the bolt lift to be rather stiff and resist accidental partial lifting. I keep the bolt on this gun from accidentally lifing and causing me to miss game by neck sizing my rounds. My M7 has a hinged floor plate and can be unloaded with the safety on (which I don't particularly like). It has never gone off while unloading, though, ever. I don't go pointing it at someone when I do this. The gun doesn't have a hinged floor plate and one must take it off safety to unload it. I've killed most of the deer I've ever killed with that rifle. YMMV My 722 was an inheritance, bought by my grandfather back in the 50s, has killed dozens of deer. So, I just won't do it, mess with a perfect trigger. No one ever got up out of its case and shot them. Many of my friends have used 700s and variants over the years. Well, I have a 722 and a Model 7 and Remington ain't gonna lay a FINGER on those triggers! They're fantastic and I paid a gunsmith to set them at a crisp (and safe) 3 lbs.
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January 2023
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