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I received my Styria Arms trigger guard today and wow! It's well made, HEAVY duty, and high quality. It will require a little fitting to get it to work in my McMillan stock but once I get it installed I'll post pics of the finished product. I did install it into the original stock and it fits like a glove. Many thanks to Styria Arms.
You mean gunsmithing is required to make it fit a McMillan stock?
Indeed, the Styria Arms trigger guard/mag well seems to be well made and rugged - but unfortunately not what I am looking for (aluminum trigger guard/mag well for the original Steyr Mannlicher SSG 69 rotary magazine).
By the way, may I ask you how much your rifle is weighting as it is pictured - with all the hardware but with an empty magazine ?
Nice McMillan stock too. Do you like it ?
Hi Guys..sorry for the delay in responding, we have been crazy bizzy here. We are getting new machinery in the shop and that's consuming alot of my time. We have the design worked out and will start making test parts shortly. I have a rifle here AND a McMillan stock, so we will make it so it wont take much to fit into your rifle. Stay tuned, were working on it.. thanks for the support
Jeff and Pam
This thread is a god send. I am the lucky owner of a SSG 69 PI with a broken trigger guard. And a search on the interweb brought me here.
I have also been looking at the Styria Arms product, but reading this thread makes me think that they are not interested in selling a lot of those.
So the CDI option look like the way to go. So I will lurk around, and see how things play out.
But i have one aditional question, and i hope that i am not hijacking this thread.
I bought the rifle with a wooden stock, it appears to be a Mchale stock, but i have not been able to find another picture on the internet of a Mchale stock in wood, so i assume that its a stock that has been made to order, but the original Steyr plastic triggerguard fit perfectly in it, and i assume that the CDI product will do aswell.
Take a look at the pictures and let med know if you agree.View attachment 21567View attachment 21568
I would like to add a little tip for repairing your original plastic triggerguard.
If you still have the plastic triggerguard, but it is cracked, one way to "fix it" (and this is by no means a permanent fix) is to use acetone to disolve the plastic and the press the crack together.
The way I did it was to open the crack as much as i could without causing the plastic to crack further, and with a cuetip dap a small drop of acetone on to the crack. Cappiliar action then draws the acetone in to the crack, dissolves the plastic, and after about 5 seconds i could press the crack together and the crack would close and a small bead of plastic would flow to the top of the crack.
I used this process on the 2 pieces of plastic around the stock screws, thus enabling me to securely mount the action in the stock. unfortunately i do not have the rest of the triggerguard, but i assume that it can also be used to stop any cracks from spreading in an otherwise sound triggerguard, and that way extending its usefull life.
Checked CDI site, nothing about Steyr SSG anything. Would be a buyer if I were able to use my existing 5 & 10rd mags.
While your stock looks similar to a McMillan mchale, I assure you the wood stock on your rifle is a factory Steyr stock. Ive seen a few Steyr SSG's with wood stocks such as yours. You certainly don't come across them often. Congrats on owning a fairly rare configuration.
Check out the SSG Match rifle listed right now on GunBroker; same stock as yours.
I wanted to give everyone a heads up on the replacement triggerguards from Steyr with metal inserts/reinforcement. The front screw hole is fixed in a proper manner but the rear still has an issue. There is a gap between the reinforcement ring and the stock which either needs to be shimmed or bedded. I had to make a .145 spacer ring to fit between the bottom plastic and the stock under the screw head. If you don't fill this gap, I can see the rear hole still being prone to failure.
Also something that might be of interest to everyone interested in these rifles it is my understanding this will be the last year of production.