Back on MCB2.0, I sold a handful of stainless sears designed carefully to let CCI internals (bolt, hammer, powertube) to drop into a Nelspot with the stock frame. I decided to run another batch. Reject the kink with a modern- acting Nelly!
The geometry lets the sear sit "flat", instead of closed too far like a filed-down 007 sear. The photo below shows the difference between stock internals, CCI guts with my sear, and the CCI sear for reference.
Triggers are back in stock - $18 each plus $5 shipping.
Sears are back, too - $10 each plus $5 shipping. And absolutely, I'll combine shipping for anything under 1lb total.
Pm for PayPal info or head to the website in my sig!
Install tips:
Buy a CCI hammer assembly, bolt assembly, and power tube assembly with nut. Might as well get some springs too.
I like to clamp the CCI sear itself in a vise, with the CCI hammer sticking up. Use a 1/16" flat faced punch to drive the roll pin through until the sear pops loose from the pin. Put the new sear in the vise, put the old sear in your pocket, put the hammer on the new sear, and line up the roll pin with the hole (don't lose the sear spring along the way!). Then just taaaap it in. Et voila!
Remove the nylon set screw from the CCI bolt, and you have a hole for your pump arm screw.
The geometry lets the sear sit "flat", instead of closed too far like a filed-down 007 sear. The photo below shows the difference between stock internals, CCI guts with my sear, and the CCI sear for reference.
Triggers are back in stock - $18 each plus $5 shipping.
Sears are back, too - $10 each plus $5 shipping. And absolutely, I'll combine shipping for anything under 1lb total.
Pm for PayPal info or head to the website in my sig!
Install tips:
Buy a CCI hammer assembly, bolt assembly, and power tube assembly with nut. Might as well get some springs too.
I like to clamp the CCI sear itself in a vise, with the CCI hammer sticking up. Use a 1/16" flat faced punch to drive the roll pin through until the sear pops loose from the pin. Put the new sear in the vise, put the old sear in your pocket, put the hammer on the new sear, and line up the roll pin with the hole (don't lose the sear spring along the way!). Then just taaaap it in. Et voila!
Remove the nylon set screw from the CCI bolt, and you have a hole for your pump arm screw.
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