I thought I would share this here too! I posted it on rimfirecentral also.
For a lack of better terminology, I will call this blueprinting the accutrigger. I stoned, leveled, and polished all the mating surfaces per the Accutrigger thread here: http://www.rimfirecentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=227014, which was a great help and got me started on working my trigger. Each change I made led me to finding something else I did not like.
The trigger group
Field stripped
Pull the E-clips and pins and shake, this is what you get
I am going to add a few shims to take up all the loose play and line it all up
I also had a spring with the bent tail that just sat in a small hole in the base plate. I don’t have any pix of that, but I did not like it. I could see it squirming around as the spring compressed. What I did was drill out and tap the hole to a 10/32 size. I then loctited a 10/32 x 3/16" stainless setscrew into my new hole and ground the bottom side flush.
This gave the trigger spring a nice firm foundation and still allowed standard tuning.
The new parts
Reassembling the trigger
1. Insert the spring in the sear, hold the sear in the trigger assy. Slip a shim on the bottom side, and align with the hole. Slip the pin in partway so you can get the other shim in. (tweezers and a jewelers screwdriver are a big help)
Once aligned slide the pin the rest of the way through and put the E-clip on.
For a lack of better terminology, I will call this blueprinting the accutrigger. I stoned, leveled, and polished all the mating surfaces per the Accutrigger thread here: http://www.rimfirecentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=227014, which was a great help and got me started on working my trigger. Each change I made led me to finding something else I did not like.
The trigger group
Field stripped
Pull the E-clips and pins and shake, this is what you get
I am going to add a few shims to take up all the loose play and line it all up
I also had a spring with the bent tail that just sat in a small hole in the base plate. I don’t have any pix of that, but I did not like it. I could see it squirming around as the spring compressed. What I did was drill out and tap the hole to a 10/32 size. I then loctited a 10/32 x 3/16" stainless setscrew into my new hole and ground the bottom side flush.
This gave the trigger spring a nice firm foundation and still allowed standard tuning.
The new parts
Reassembling the trigger
1. Insert the spring in the sear, hold the sear in the trigger assy. Slip a shim on the bottom side, and align with the hole. Slip the pin in partway so you can get the other shim in. (tweezers and a jewelers screwdriver are a big help)
Once aligned slide the pin the rest of the way through and put the E-clip on.