KRG folding stock for TRG 42 arrived & installed

JimGnitecki

Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
Oct 24, 2011
561
12
Austin, TX
The KRG folding stock I bought from another hide member arrived today! And, I got it installed:

First, here it extended:


TRG42withKRGstock-extended.jpg



And now, folded:


TRG42withKRGstock-folded.jpg



The color rendition in the photo is NOT correct. The lighting was really dark here this afternoon, due to very rainy weather. The flash on the camera "grayed" the stock (just as it did the TRG factory magazine). The stock is actually a pure black and matches the TRG factory black beautifully.

Note that the stock is quite a bit heavier than the factory stock. I weighed my factory stock, and even with the 3/8" alloy height spacer installed between the stock and cheekpiece, it still weighs only 29 ounces. I forgot to weight the KRG stock before I installed it, but the website says it weighs 47 ounces. So, the rifle picks up 18 ounces, at the rear of the rifle.

For those who will ask, the scope is a Nightforce 12-42 x56 Benchrest, and the bipod is Atlas.

Note that the KRG stock came to me with the "wrong" (Remington) grips through no fault of the seller. He is sending me the correct TRG grips, and I will send him the Remington ones.
smile.gif


Note also that the KRG stock came with a flat lower surface to place a bag under, what appears to be a QD sling receptacle (I haven't tried it yet), and provisions and the actual parts to mount a lower Picatinny rail instead (included!), so that an Atlas quick adjust monopod can be added later.

The rubber buttplate is Remington pattern, so you have a choice of many buttplates if you don't care for the factory one.

The cheekpiece adjust up ridiculously easily and is easily locked in place at any height. No tool required. The buttplate assembly is adjusted for length of pull by releasing 2 cam locks and then extending or compressing the buttplate out or in. No tool required. The rubber buttplate can be easily moved up or down using a 3mm wrench to release and lock. The rubber buttplate can also be angled via allen wrench.

The folding feature of the stock makes the rifle much shorter for carry or storage. It fits into a 41" case snugly, but a 42" would be better. The bolt can be removed when the stock is folded. The stock LOCKS in both extended and folded modes, and is very easily and quickly unlocked.

The stock is wonderfully rigid. No play.

Installation was a breeze, taking 10 minutes only because I read and re-read the instructions in advance to ensure I didn't mess up.

I'm pretty pleased.

Now, I need to get some reloading gear for this 338 Lapua caliber so that I can actually fire some rounds using the new stock. Norma cases will come after the 1st of the month, and I have the Federal 215M primers. The bullets will be easily ordered. But the powder and the loading press are presenting challenges. But, I'll get there.

Jim G
 
Re: KRG folding stock for TRG 42 arrived & installed

Looks good Jim. The new buttstock will be a welcome change. You still get the feel of the factory stock but more adjustability and you can go compact at will. Good stuff!
 
Re: KRG folding stock for TRG 42 arrived & installed

I just re-read the instructions last evening and realized that the cheek peice can also be moved frontward or rearward via re-positionign fo the 2 screws that secure it to the stock. There appears to be a pretty good rnage of movement in that dimensino too!

Jim G
 
Re: KRG folding stock for TRG 42 arrived & installed

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: KYS338</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Why do you have a scope riser on a bolt action? Does that not kill your neck with it being that high up? </div></div>

I know this will sound odd at first, but here is the logical explanation:

I share a Nightforce 12-42 x 56 scope between the TRG 42 and an LMT MWSE 308 semiauto AR type rifle. The scope rings are mounted to a Larue riser that achieves two objectives:

- It ensures that as the scope is moved from one rifle to the other, POI remains absolutely unchanged on each rifle. It does so ebcause the Larue is KNOWN for this consistency.

- On the LMT rifle, I found, as I do on ALL AR type rifles, without either very high rings or a riser, my cheekbone presses uncomfortably into the cheek rest and I STILL cannot get my eye properly aligned with the scope. It's just the way my face bone structure happens to be. The riser solves that problem.

I was expecting trouble before I bought the TRG. I figured that the riser would make the scope "too high" on the TRG. But, I was pleasantly surprised. When mounted on the TRG, the riser results in the bore-to-scope-centerline dimension on the TRG is different enough that when I raised the factory cheekpiece on the TRG just about a 1/3 of an inch, the ergonmics (as actually measured manually) are virtually identical to that on the LMT! First time out with the TRG, and having only 20 rounds of factory ammo to sight in and then shoot just a very few groups, I was pleased with how good the initial results with the TRG were.

Now, this KRG stock is MUCH more adjustable, and more EASILY adjustable than the factory stock, so I figure I can dial in exactly what works best for me.

By the way, since I have zero MOA rails on both the LMT and TRG, at least for the moment (I am NOT ready to shoot at 1000 yards just yet
smile.gif
), I need to make just a modest windage adjsutment when moving the scope from the LMT to the TRG or vice versa. Very easy and allows me to have one GOOD scope versus 2 mediocre ones.

Jim G
 
Re: KRG folding stock for TRG 42 arrived & installed

Hey JimG,

I'm facing the same dilemma as you with proper cheek weld and eye sight. I'm running a NF 5.5-22x56 on an AICS chassis but my GG&G QD rings are at 1.056. With the cheek piece already being a bit high compared to some of the other chassis out there and my facial structure I'm having trouble finding my sweet spot. I just ordered the same rings in 1.40 so even if the scope sits higher off the barrel than I'd like and most people would like I'm hoping it works. I'm also switching between two rifles with minimal adjusting.
 
Re: KRG folding stock for TRG 42 arrived & installed

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Ultraman550</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Hey JimG,

I'm facing the same dilemma as you with proper cheek weld and eye sight. I'm running a NF 5.5-22x56 on an AICS chassis but my GG&G QD rings are at 1.056. With the cheek piece already being a bit high compared to some of the other chassis out there and my facial structure I'm having trouble finding my sweet spot. I just ordered the same rings in 1.40 so even if the scope sits higher off the barrel than I'd like and most people would like I'm hoping it works. I'm also switching between two rifles with minimal adjusting. </div></div>

Yes, I have been greatly impressed with just how much difference proper ergonomics makes! I didn't realzie hwo much I was straining before, and so I could not be truly "relaxed" as I needed to be to fire good shots, plus I got too fatigued too quickly. I could see MARKED improvments in group size, consistency of POI, and freedom from fatigue afetr making some beneficial changes. I intend to keep on refining too!

I think many people don't really udnerstand just how important ergonomics are. While superior rifles have superior barrels, they also have superior ergonomics, and ideally very ADJUSTABLE ergonomics, tunable to an individual shooter, AND to different shotoing positions for the same shooter.

The best handguns I ever fired were custom Caspians built for me by hand by Fred Craig years ago. One of them was tiny (signficiantly smaller than "Officer's" size), and chambered in 38 Super (not exactly a pussycat round when loaded to REAL 38 Super specs of 115g at 1350 fps). But ebcause it was so ergonmically perfect for me, I was able to fire 2" gorups at 50 yards with it on my better days.

I have a healthy respect for the importance of dialing in a firearm to the shooter.

Jim G