jackieschmidt
Gold $$ Contributor
I had thought about lengthening the cocking cam on the BAT M bolt, which is the best way to increase pin fall and avoid cock on close. But since I had to re position the trigger hanger anyway, I just moved it back to get a full .250 fall, settling on a little cock on close. In other words, I chickened out.For me, timing a trigger is about the feel. I hate "cock on close" when chambering a round. I have a method for timing 700 style bolts while maintaining good pin fall but it's not something I would recommend trying without seeing in person to fully understand the mechanics of timing and how it's effected by different parts. Also I wouldn't attempt that job without a good milling machine.
So many variables in accuracy, but timing isn't really one of them. Amount of fp fall, fp spring weights, fp protrusion...yes on accuracy effects. Timing the trigger to eliminate cock on close, not so much.

In the picture, that is not the spring I used. As you can see, it is close to coil bind in the static position. I played with several long course wind springs and got it right at 25 pounds of static pressure.