![]() ![]() A poorly inletted stock can interfere with the works. In here must be scrupulously clean.īefore cleaning, one thing to look for is wood chips or splinters. No grease and only the barest minimum of oil so as to prevent corrosion. In order for the trigger mechanism to work properly, everything must be clean and dry. If you're having trouble visualizing, take the stock off of your gun and watch how everything moves when you move the safety, pull the trigger, etc. Pushing the safety to fire moves the 232 piece to engage the seer, stamped "D." If you look closely, you can see how all of the ridges engage each other, and how when the trigger is pulled, the 232 linkage lifts, the seer from the hammer allowing the hammer to fall. You can see both hammers forward in the first pic, and the piece stamped "232." The 232 piece is a linkage that is connected to the trigger that lifts when the trigger is pulled. A finger on the trigger trying to select the top barrel on a O/U is the last thing I would want to see from a inexperienced shooter.:roll: An accident looking for a place to happen in my opinion. Especially for inexperienced or new shooters. Unique perhaps but not a very good design in my opinion. And as Rastoff already mentioned, one can't switch back to the bottom barrel unless they open the gun first. Good thing as well since it is not a very good way to select the top barrel. No other O/U I am aware of has this type feature except for the Baikal. Only the Baikal built single trigger IZH27, MP310 and Remington SPR310 have the push trigger forward feature for selecting the top barrel first. Move the safety to the rear (Safety ON Position) and then left to select the top barrel, to the right to select the bottom barrel. The Stoeger Condor Supreme and Stoeger Condor Competition both have conventional barrel selector on the safety. The standard Stoeger Condor O/U does not have selectable barrel feature or option. Rastoff, I believe you just gave instructions for selecting the top barrel on the single trigger Baikal O/U, not the Stoeger Condor. The guy that loads my ammunition on the other hand.Ĭlick to expand. My own Condor gave me fits for a few weeks, but once I got it straightened out, I never had a FTF that was the fault of the gun. Let me know if you need any more help, and I can post pics tomorrow afternoon when I get home. If everything is working properly, that should cycle everything to get the over bbl seer engaged. ![]() One other thing you might try is, with snap caps, (do not try this with a loaded gun) snap the under bbl, hold the receiver in your left hand and give the recoil pad a very sharp wrap with the heel of your right. (forgive me if my terminology is wrong, I'm more of a shooter and less of a smith) Try as the others say, and remove the stock and see if there is any cosmoline in there that is sticking that cam. That cycling of the safety allows the cam to fall to get the trigger to engage the seer for the top bbl. If cycling the safety will allow you to shoot the top bbl, then it is working, more or less, correctly. I wouldn't recommend it for anyone who shoots more than a few hundred rounds per year. A few thousand rounds later and the trigger is about as crisp as Jello. I bought one (used) of the first runs of the condor a few years back. ![]()
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