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AR15.COM
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8/30/2004 8:30:13 AM EDT
I am interested in purchasing a 2-stage trigger for my AR, which can be tuned to be very sensitive on the final stage.

Discussions with a few third parties has had me narrow the field down to either a McCormick or a Jewell 2-stage trigger system.

I'd be interested and grateful to hear from anyone with an opinion on either system.

My AR is a carbine.

thanks
8/30/2004 11:17:41 AM EDT
[#1]
Tagged
8/30/2004 11:42:08 AM EDT
[#2]
Look into the LMT two stage unit as well.
Depends what you want, a bench shooting trigger, or a quality trigger that is combat durable. Big difference.
-Steve
8/30/2004 1:54:30 PM EDT
[#3]
Jewell
8/30/2004 5:02:40 PM EDT
[#4]
Hi,

I'd like to get a very accurate two-stage trigger which is durable.
8/30/2004 5:22:51 PM EDT
[#5]
Sounds like the reason why I originally joined ARF.com. From the feedback I have received, Knights two-stage or Chip McCormick two-stage. The advantige of the Chip McCormick is it is drop in, while the disadvantige of the Knights is it is expensive.

Sammy


Quoted:
Hi,

I'd like to get a very accurate two-stage trigger which is durable.

8/30/2004 7:13:35 PM EDT
[#6]
Hmm, well the Knight's is a bit prohibitive cost-wise. Is the McCormick trigger sealed to guard against movement in the mechanism?

I understand that you have a serious amount of play (1-4lbs) in the weighting of the Jewell trigger both 1st and 2nd stage. Do both the McCormick and the LMT trigger systems offer the same?
8/30/2004 7:14:16 PM EDT
[#7]
tagged?
9/1/2004 3:09:29 PM EDT
[#8]
Jewel.

I have two of them (put one in myself), and they're great.  You can set them up any way you want in terms of first and second stage weights.  Only problem is, they're not cheap.

I believe the McCormick isn't ajustable.
9/1/2004 5:04:54 PM EDT
[#9]
The McCormick unit is nice, as sweet as a jewell, and way easier to install. I am buying one.
9/1/2004 5:54:23 PM EDT
[#10]
I have no first hand  experience with the McCormic but reports have been good.
Unique part of the Jewell is once it is set up you can varry the weight by moving a spring leg into different positions of this rachet type wheel.Pop open the upper,change the setting,and you go from a super light bench only trigger to a clean crisp dcm legal pull. (or anywhere in between) My experience has shown the Jewell doesn't work well with the DPMS dedicated .22rf upper or a ceiner conversion. I think the hammer strike is too light or falls at a bad angle or something. I do really like my jewell
9/2/2004 4:31:17 AM EDT
[#11]
MY ADMITTEDLY LIMITED EXPERIENCE WITH JEWELL TRIGGERS IN A PAIR OF CUSTOMER'S LES BAER LOWERS HAS BEEN ANYTHING BUT POSITIVE.

WE'VE BEEN USING KNIGHT'S TRIGGERS FOR SEVERAL YEARS WITH COMPLETE SUCCESS, TOTAL SATISFACTION.

WE'RE VERY OPTIMISTIC, HOWEVER, GIVEN THE DROP-IN FEATURE OF THE MCCORMICK, TOGETHER WITH ITS INCREDIBLE PRICE OF $160 DELIVERED FEDEX, THAT THE MCCORMICK WILL BECOME THE BENCHMARK AGAINST WHICH ALL AFTERMARKET TRIGGERS WILL BE COMPARED.

WES GRANT
MSTN.BIZ
9/6/2004 11:26:35 AM EDT
[#12]
While it's a distinct advantage to have a drop-in module trigger group think the on-the-bench adjustability of the Jewell for around the same $ outweighs the advantage of the CMC trigger.

Have used JARD and have no experience with CMC, presently use a Jewell. On the bench it's set at 2 Lbs. and for "Gun Games" it's easy to adj. it to whatever you want. Install requires that you "learn" the trigger. May take a bit of time and head-scrathing but once you've got it, it's a snap to tune it to your own preference and/or use.    
9/9/2004 5:14:34 PM EDT
[#13]
Zero complaints with my 2 stage Jewell.  VERY sensitive.
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