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one of us |
I did a trigger job on ONE of the Omega rifles that I owned. There is NO adjustment, your only recourse is honing the contact areas and that must be done with extreme caution as the whole assembly is at risk (I doubt T/C would warranty a botched trigger job so replacement could be expensive). Mine finally turned out well but I was sweating at one point thinking I had gone too far. Were I to attempt another, the only honing I would do is to eliminate the center ridge on both the hammer and trigger pieces at their contact areas. You will see that "ridge" easily once you disassemble the trigger. Be VERY careful to note the position and orientation of all pieces if you do break it down. In general, it is NOT a job I would advise any amateur to take on. The timing and contact surfaces involved in that design are delicate and one could easily create a dangerous or non-functioning rifle. If someone knows of a skilled and practiced gunsmith willing to do Omega trigger jobs - they would be doing a service to post that information. | ||
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one of us |
"I have noticed several T/C dealers specifying that the T/C Omega has an adjustable trigger." =========================================================== Will you please list those dealers here in a reply post? They need to be reported to T/C for their stupidity on items they sell. The only exception would be new, improved Omega models that are about to be introduced for the very first time this summer. | |||
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Moderator |
Hey Joe, What's the scoop on the "new" Omega models? | |||
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one of us |
Yeah, whatcha ya know there T7? And how'd you find out? Spies? | |||
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