On 3/30/13 4:22 PM, Tim wrote:
On Mar 30, 2:55 pm, "F.O.A.D." wrote:
On 3/30/13 3:17 PM, Tim wrote:
On Mar 30, 9:09 am, J Herring wrote:
...yesterday at Gander Mountain. Haven't fired it yet, but it sure is a nice feeling pistol. My wife
loves the size.
While there I noticed one of these in the cabinet:http://tinyurl.com/cpkd7td
John, a Kimber is one of the finest of the finest. But I think they're
a bit over priced. That is, unless you simply must drive a Rolls
Royce.
?;^ )
But one thing you might add to what you have is a "trigger shoe" No
more than they cost,they can really help your accuracy. about any gun
dealer carries them.
http://i895.photobucket.com/albums/a...14EBR-RI/attac...
Or get a wide, flat trigger.
Harry, the trigger shoe is a cheap and effective option. I have them
on three pistols and two high powered rifles equipped with them.
10-14$ ea.beats a trigger assembly overhaul, and you can install or
remove in a minute too
I guess. The wide, straight trigger on my CZ was an option when I
ordered the pistol, and wanted it converted to SAO and a light and fast
trigger. It wasn't an expensive option, though, about $30 to $35
installed. My Ruger .22LR has the standard Ruger trigger, a curved
trigger but wide.
These "shoes" don't make the trigger wider than the trigger guard, do they?
I've been thinking about getting a suppressor for my Mark III Target
Ruger. I have to fill out the Class III forms but the suppressors aren't
too expensive.