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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Gunsmithing
Aftermarket firing pin assemblies for savage
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<blockquote data-quote="Trickymissfit" data-source="post: 471607" data-attributes="member: 25383"><p>I'm going back several years prior. Tobe exact it may have been on the old (and now extinct) AOL shooters board. It was just about the time frame that I did the Tubbs speedlock kit in a 112 rebuild (not much of one). Perhaps his views have changed? I do know that a guy did an article in P.S. a few years back on the same subject, and his times kinda mirror yours. But he was doing nothing but math equations involving the spring, and firing pin data. Came up with some crazy number for a Remington (slightly over 2.2ms with a Gray Tan speed lock kit). I knew he was out in left field because I have the better speedlock kit that Tubbs quit selling (the one with the titanium firing pin) with a spring that felt like a race hemi valve spring. Fred was talking about using an electrical triggering device to measure the lock time. Anyway it's not all that important as the savage is much faster than a Remington 700 (over 30%), and still not quite as fast as a 788.</p><p>gary</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Trickymissfit, post: 471607, member: 25383"] I'm going back several years prior. Tobe exact it may have been on the old (and now extinct) AOL shooters board. It was just about the time frame that I did the Tubbs speedlock kit in a 112 rebuild (not much of one). Perhaps his views have changed? I do know that a guy did an article in P.S. a few years back on the same subject, and his times kinda mirror yours. But he was doing nothing but math equations involving the spring, and firing pin data. Came up with some crazy number for a Remington (slightly over 2.2ms with a Gray Tan speed lock kit). I knew he was out in left field because I have the better speedlock kit that Tubbs quit selling (the one with the titanium firing pin) with a spring that felt like a race hemi valve spring. Fred was talking about using an electrical triggering device to measure the lock time. Anyway it's not all that important as the savage is much faster than a Remington 700 (over 30%), and still not quite as fast as a 788. gary [/QUOTE]
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Aftermarket firing pin assemblies for savage
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