

I fall deeply for these when you do all this. Strip and clean and lube properly including the bolt and they become amazing! Worth the effort imo, diamond in the ruff but you have to polish. I slobber JB bore paste in the action and cycle a few hundred times. Other cz pains are they are rough agricultural out of the box. Based on the way the trigger is from the factory, I'm not holding my breath. I guess I'll find out if they took the same care on the inside as on the outside. My 527 is one of the "ebony edition" models and is nicely finished so far as you can tell without taking it out of the stock.
#Cz 527 7.62 stock crack full#
Though the internet is full of people waxing eloquent shout CZ rifles, nearly every one I've ever looked at has had poor metal finishing with tool marks visible.

You’ll see as you play with it, it’s easy

as said the creep one you’ll see as you adjust the creep out you need to just load the trigger to do so, there’s a small range there. The weight one brings you to about 2 3/4 lb. Couple boxes and lots of dry fires since and we’re golden. That’s why I learned it then blue loctite and set again and then cure overnight before playing again. It’s the creep screw that’ll move on ya and can be finicky. I have a very nice 2.25 lb crisp single stage on my pretty new 527. Sounds like couple guys have had some bad ones, I’ve had a few and all were nearly as good as a Tikka or Sako imo. If this trigger breaks that clean, I'll be more than satisfied. That said, the Hawkeye predator two stage is a very good trigger as well, a bit different, but clean and light enough. Some might accuse me of being a fanboy, but the Sako factory triggers are all I need, I'm not looking for a bench rest trigger after all. I'm used to Sako triggers, and I have a Ruger Hawkeye predator that has a nice two stage trigger as well.
