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Member |
So have I, at least a half-dozen. More probably. But I’ve had one, on a FAL, that got a little frisky in short order. I sent it to Mark Graham at ARS to be put right. I’ve met the man in question in person several times. He is super nice and his service is excellent. However, based on my experience, I can only conclude that sometimes he gets a little too close to the edge on the stoning and polishing. | |||
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Lead slingin' Parrot Head |
SIGWolf, the OP, has yet to confirm who the gunsmith was that worked on the trigger pack...perhaps with good reason. IF the gunsmith in question is indeed BS, then I will say that I have withheld commenting on him or his work when discussed in various threads over the years here. I consider besmirching a person's professional skills or character to be a serious thing and I don't do it lightly...and so I'm going to be intentionally vague in my comments now in an open forum. I will simply say that in dealing with "BS" you should proceed with extreme caution...if at all. For those that require more detail you may contact me through email and I can provide both first-hand and second-hand accounts to justify my statement. | |||
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Frequent Denizen of the Twilight Zone |
I think as you do. I'm very careful about defaming someones reputation, especially based on anecdotes (in this case only my own experience) and here say (the opinion of others). However, the opinions I did receive were told directly to me and had to do specifically with the person who did the work. These were shared in private emails and not for public consumption. That is the other reason I'm intentionally vague about both the gunsmith who did the work and the two gunsmiths who warned me about the work. Besides, my point had to do with how I should proceed given that I, personally, am not confident of the work that was done. Who did the work, is not primarily the question. The other consideration is that of the two gunsmiths I spoke with one, I believe, had most of his experience with pistol work that had been done, while the other, who was equally vehement, dealt primarily with HK and with rifle work. I consider both to be unquestionable experts. Most of the negative anecdotes I've read have had to do with pistols and not rifles, so that is one consideration. However, I realized no one here in this thread can really evaluate the sources without knowing who they are. Suffice it to say, personally, it was enough to unsettle me. I sent the trigger group to the person in question based on recommendation and reputation which was overwhelmingly good at that point. It was like whiplash to then get the personal and expert warnings I received. Anecdotes are not evidence, even if they are multiple. Subject expertise and experience with the specific issue in question is evidence. So, no, I'm not going to confirm who the gunsmith is, nor who his critics were. I'm looking to determine how I proceed given my uncertainty, which I feel is highly warranted. I appreciate all the replies so far. | |||
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Frequent Denizen of the Twilight Zone |
I've considered that. I do have someone here I trust. I asked him if he would be willing to evaluate it. At the time he was rather non-committal, but I may ask him again. He works mostly on pistols, but he has built some custom rifles. | |||
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Frequent Denizen of the Twilight Zone |
I had thought this the best course if I choose to shoot it. My concern is that even if it doesn't fail immediately, if the work is a "dangerously hackjob" then a range trip or two might not prove out the safety of the work. | |||
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Frequent Denizen of the Twilight Zone |
That is my concern. I've gone to the range once with it, fired off a few rounds using the method recommended here and it seemed to work fine. At that point, I had not received the negative evaluations. I thought everything was fine. I could go to the range again, do the same, have the same result, but it's no guarantee the work is reliable. After all, the original trigger was find for years and years. | |||
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Frequent Denizen of the Twilight Zone |
There is a local gunsmith here who would do it and whose work I trust. I could also send it off to one of the two gunsmiths who warned me about the work. They could evaluate it and repair if needed. | |||
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Frequent Denizen of the Twilight Zone |
Yeah, I was being sarcastic. I wasn't any fun at all. | |||
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Frequent Denizen of the Twilight Zone |
Not to mention the danger to someone else's life should it get out of control. | |||
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Member |
I can't actually believe we are into page 2 on this. Buy a new trigger pack. Why are we still discussing this? Since in this case the part is EASILY replaced. If I had some rare exotic not replaceable item ok maybe you do something else. Just my opinion. “So in war, the way is to avoid what is strong, and strike at what is weak.” | |||
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Frequent Denizen of the Twilight Zone |
Thanks for the response. The more I consider it, the more I move in that direction, even though it will cost me. But then, there is peace of mind and an end to the quandary. | |||
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Frequent Denizen of the Twilight Zone |
Bought a new trigger group today. Cleaned the rifle and when it comes will take it to the range to end my estrangement with this rifle. Thank you for all your thoughtful replies. They helped me to solidify my thinking. | |||
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Frequent Denizen of the Twilight Zone |
As mentioned, I just bought another trigger pack. Went to the range this afternoon, ran about six or seven 20 round magazines through it and had a great time. I'm going to see if someone can resurrect the old one, verify it is safe or make it so, but for now, it's back to being a functional rifle in which I have confidence. | |||
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Go ahead punk, make my day |
Always good to have a firearm back in the lineup, fully repaired and verified at the range! | |||
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