by Wapiti » 12 Oct 2025, 8:31 am
Mate, given that the standard trigger pack in those rifles is the same as that fitted to their Victor Precision AR rifle, I would assume that the standard procedure of you removing the grip with an allen key up inside it, dropping out the safety detent and spring to slide out the safety barrel will allow the trigger pack to lift out the top of the split receiver. After you remove the little screws threaded onto where pins in AR's are always found.
You may find as I did that the inclusion of new springs in this trigger won't do much to the "feel" of it, because I'm pretty sure it's one of those "climbing sear" triggers. Meaning that to release the sear the hammer is actually pulled rearwards a fraction against the spring when you squeeze the trigger before it trips, just like a double action revolver works but obviously way less travel.
This is a cheapie way to ensure a trigger won't "double" and decock by following the bolt when you lighten the springs, and severely limits the triggers being made better.
An excellent trigger will be a neutral sear trigger, which are the beautiful (for an AR style) single stage jobs out there.
They certainly did some engineering cavemanship making that Taipan how they did screwing everything together. The butt in the Gen 2 impedes the trigger pack dropping out?
I have bought one of those triggers separately, however it was the version that claimed a certain nicer trigger than the dog that comes with the rifle in the box (A f**ken insult really) but it's certainly not that great and haven't attempted to dismantle it. It's still in it's plastic pack.
I do not like the two-stage trigger, just me personally. The single stage ones are 3lb and crisp as a winter morning without creep. The shame is the extra <>$300 extra you need to fork out.
"The only way to avoid criticism is to do nothing, say nothing, and be nothing."
Aristotle.
Regards G,
AKA Dr. Doolittle