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Thread: Need some opinions on a couple of guns

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  1. #1
    Still learning JessicaChen's Avatar
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    I bought my rifle today too. Went to a new shop and fell in love with the Marlin 925. Felt much better than the marlin XT22. Hopefully I will be putting it to good use sometime this week.
    gadgetman, Dougie, Scouser and 1 others like this.

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    Quote Originally Posted by JessicaChen View Post
    I bought my rifle today too. Went to a new shop and fell in love with the Marlin 925. Felt much better than the marlin XT22. Hopefully I will be putting it to good use sometime this week.
    Great choice. The 925's were the last of the Marlin made Marlin 22's (so i believe should say made in Conneticut on the barrel). Dont have the newer trigger but are better finished.

    I have a 980s which is just the stainless version of the 925 and its a wee shooter, 1/2 inch at 50 easy with CCSV.

    The triggers are creep free but pretty heavy as you will find out. Easy fix with a new trigger spring and a seer return spring shim. Mine went from about 8 lb's down to 3 1/2.

  3. #3
    Member gadgetman's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nick-D View Post
    Great choice. The 925's were the last of the Marlin made Marlin 22's (so i believe should say made in Conneticut on the barrel). Dont have the newer trigger but are better finished.

    I have a 980s which is just the stainless version of the 925 and its a wee shooter, 1/2 inch at 50 easy with CCSV.

    The triggers are creep free but pretty heavy as you will find out. Easy fix with a new trigger spring and a seer return spring shim. Mine went from about 8 lb's down to 3 1/2.
    +1

    The trigger fix is a quick easy and cheap DIY job with a pen spring.
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  4. #4
    C404 C404's Avatar
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    I think a gunsmith may be a better option for the average person when tinkering with triggers sears etc. I gave myself a bit of a shock years ago trying to be too clever , much better and not expensive, to take it to an expert imo

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    +1 Nick-D's comment on marlin 925.

    Model 925 and 980 would be pick of recent marlin bolt actions. Sound wee rifles with very good barrels, they do the hunter job well. I had several 925s go thru the cupboard in recent years and they particularly impressed me in benchrest testing on the range. Well under 0.5" at best and one 925 dropped into the 0.3"s for 5 shot groups at 50m. Found they could comfortably outshoot more expensive makes. Good performance and reliability for the $$.

    CCI subs, CCI standard velocity solids, CCI minmags and Winchester powerpoint all worth trying.

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    Quote Originally Posted by C404 View Post
    I think a gunsmith may be a better option for the average person when tinkering with triggers sears etc. I gave myself a bit of a shock years ago trying to be too clever , much better and not expensive, to take it to an expert imo
    You dont actually tinker with the sear at all, All you do is put a 1.5 mil shim into the hole in the action where the sear return spring rests. You dont have to take the trigger group apart at all, just drop it away from the action. No danger of the safety not working as if you over shim it you wont be able to get the bolt in or out. so it gives you an easy indicator as to how much shim your trigger needs.

    The return spring mod is an addon to the trigger spring which gets the majority of the lightening done and again is very easy to do. The trigger spring alone got me down to about 5 lbs and the sear return srping netted anoth 1 & 1/4 or so.

    Any sear surface polishing or mods that will effect safety, then yeah I absolutely agree, take it to a gunsmith. But both the above mods are super easy to do and pretty hard to get wrong

  7. #7
    Member gadgetman's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nick-D View Post
    You dont actually tinker with the sear at all, All you do is put a 1.5 mil shim into the hole in the action where the sear return spring rests. You dont have to take the trigger group apart at all, just drop it away from the action. No danger of the safety not working as if you over shim it you wont be able to get the bolt in or out. so it gives you an easy indicator as to how much shim your trigger needs.

    The return spring mod is an addon to the trigger spring which gets the majority of the lightening done and again is very easy to do. The trigger spring alone got me down to about 5 lbs and the sear return srping netted anoth 1 & 1/4 or so.

    Any sear surface polishing or mods that will effect safety, then yeah I absolutely agree, take it to a gunsmith. But both the above mods are super easy to do and pretty hard to get wrong
    With mine I just did the trigger return spring and that probably took it down from 6lb to 2lb. Didn't even bother with the sear spring. Did the old bang, thump, slap test to make sure it was all good afterwards.
    There are only three types of people in this world. Those that can count, and those that can't!

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    Quote Originally Posted by gadgetman View Post
    With mine I just did the trigger return spring and that probably took it down from 6lb to 2lb. Didn't even bother with the sear spring. Did the old bang, thump, slap test to make sure it was all good afterwards.
    Nah I hadnt planned on it either but wanted a little more after the trigger spring.

 

 

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