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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
TriggerTech vs Jewell
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<blockquote data-quote="FURMAN" data-source="post: 1465810" data-attributes="member: 26535"><p>You will have to decide what you want or what is important to you. The facts are that the TT is more enclosed and thus less likely to get debris inside. The TT uses ball bearings which are going to be less prone to failure due to debris. The TT has very little overtravel where as the Jewell is adjustable. Fact- with almost no overtravel you are going to be slamming whatever pull weight you have your trigger set to into the rifle as soon as the sear breaks and no matter how large or small it will upset the rifle-period. The more overtravel you have the more dwell time and the farther the bullet will be down or even out of the barrel by the time the trigger comes to rest. Every fraction of a second will cause less momentum to be applied to the bullet. Every fraction of an inch in overtravel will remove some of the force you are applying to the trigger to dissipate. This will result is less upset of the rifle. If precision matters to you you should ask yourself why you will be very hard pressed to find anyone winning in benchrest who has a trigger adjusted to no overtravel. If precession is not top priority or you feel the Jewell will fail you and dependability trumps precision go with the TT. I personally have never had a Jewell fail. I personally have noticed my fliers have decreased with the addition of overtravel to my triggers. Again no TT for me.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="FURMAN, post: 1465810, member: 26535"] You will have to decide what you want or what is important to you. The facts are that the TT is more enclosed and thus less likely to get debris inside. The TT uses ball bearings which are going to be less prone to failure due to debris. The TT has very little overtravel where as the Jewell is adjustable. Fact- with almost no overtravel you are going to be slamming whatever pull weight you have your trigger set to into the rifle as soon as the sear breaks and no matter how large or small it will upset the rifle-period. The more overtravel you have the more dwell time and the farther the bullet will be down or even out of the barrel by the time the trigger comes to rest. Every fraction of a second will cause less momentum to be applied to the bullet. Every fraction of an inch in overtravel will remove some of the force you are applying to the trigger to dissipate. This will result is less upset of the rifle. If precision matters to you you should ask yourself why you will be very hard pressed to find anyone winning in benchrest who has a trigger adjusted to no overtravel. If precession is not top priority or you feel the Jewell will fail you and dependability trumps precision go with the TT. I personally have never had a Jewell fail. I personally have noticed my fliers have decreased with the addition of overtravel to my triggers. Again no TT for me. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
TriggerTech vs Jewell
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