westerner wrote on Sep 21
st, 2013 at 1:27am:
Have replaced two trigger springs in my DS highwall and broke one in Tommy Masons HW. Double sets on target rifles were made to be used as such. Using the trigger without setting it can and will break the trigger spring. Decocking will break it for sure. If your spring aint broke yet...........dumb luck?? Could be.
Joe.
The only double sets I use as single are my stevens. I don't even think they work, maybe it's because I've made them that way? I think they worked at one time and I didn't like using them, I've used them unset so long I'm not sure they even work. I've thought I could just adjust them and they would work again, maybe I'm wrong. I might work on them and try them, you never know they might be great!
The ballard works well, and I like it well enough to use it. Its a bench gun so the light trigger is nice to keep the gun unmoving when fired on the rest in free recoil. The Winchester doubles I've never liked the feel of them, so haven't made them up into a rifle, I might like them if I did one and used it. The Winchester single sets don't feel real good at all, they're lighter but not better than a well tuned winchester standard trigger. I have several originals that have come with them, so use the rifles as they came to me, but don't prefer them at all.
I have a hepburn double set, but haven't used it enough to have an opinion on it. I've owned a few Remington single sets, they work but I don't like the trigger action on them at all. It's an over center design, and has excessive trigger movement to work. The sudden movement of the trigger, and then stopping at the end of travel don't lend any help to accuracy.
Now, the guys I shoot with all have double sets on their sharps and wouldn't do without them.
dave