De-Gunking a Jewell Trigger — Speedy Shows How
Gunsmiths often have to serve as gun “doctors” as well as gun builders. Gunsmith (and Hall-of-Fame shooter) Thomas “Speedy” Gonzalez was recently asked to fix a trigger problem. A customer was complaining about a trigger that was erratic and “mushy”. Speedy quickly diagnosed the problem. The Jewell trigger was clogged with gunk and sludge — left-over solvents and lubricants had gummed up the mechanisms. Here’s how the cleaning process unfolded…
Speedy: “Gee why would I want to blueprint my Jewell trigger….it has just got a little mushy lately. It may just need some adjustment. Yeah right — take a look at this”:
Speedy: “Should I go get a tetanus shot now?”
Gunsmith Mike Bryant comments: “I’ve seen a lot of Remington 700 triggers that were gummed up like [that] Jewell was. Also have seen lots of 700 triggers that had the weight-of-pull screw adjusted [by the owner] to where it had no compression on the spring. I wonder how many of the Remington accidental discharges involved triggers with one or the other of these conditions.”
Speedy: “What?! Powder in trigger as well… hmmmmmm.”
Clean up done with Iosso Lubricant/Cleaner. Speedy says this is the “Best parts cleaner I have ever found if you don’t have an ultra sonic cleaning tank. I just melted that crud off with a Q-Tip”.
Same Jewell trigger all happy now — clean as a whistle.
Trigger ready for final re-assembly, looking better than new. Thanks Speedy!
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- How to Disassemble, Clean, and Re-Assemble Jewell Triggers
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Tags: Benchrest, Fire Control, Gunsmith, Gunsmithing, Jewell Trigger, Speedy Gonzalez, Thomas Gonzalez
I asked Speedy if I could just ultrasonic clean my trigger after seeing this one he posted originally on Facebook and Speedy said, “Just Take it apart. Use your cell phone to document how the parts go back. Just be mindful of the little spring in the trigger shoe.” and I did just that, mine was no were as dirty, in fact it was spotless!
Thanks Thomas, my good friend, for your guidance!
Keith Skjerdal
Canada