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TREK 10-22

6.3K views 24 replies 18 participants last post by  Nagrom  
#1 · (Edited)
From Desert Tech Introduced at SHOT SHOW 2022.
Image

Anybody seen this?
Chris
 
#6 ·
22 Plinkster did a positive review on the Trek-22 about a month ago.
He said the grip wasn't bad and allowed for larger mags.
He also said the trigger pull was not bad using a BX trigger.
The action fit tight in the stock, best 10-22 bull-pup conversion he has seen.
Not a bull-pup fan but this has potential as a truck/tractor/4-wheeler gun.
 
#9 · (Edited)
Hmm, I have a muzzle lite stock laying around somewhere, clunky, awful trigger, terrible sights, but it was fun. Mag changes took some getting acquainted with the weapon. An updated bullpup with better optics mounting could be fun.
Checking the price, nope, I won’t be getting one. I may putz around with the used muzzlelite again someday, but spending triple digits for a bullpup stock for a 22 is not my cup of tea.
 
#19 ·
I had one and sold it.

The fit was fine. Trigger not too bad.

What killed it for me is the looseness of the barrel in the whole action. You can deflect the end of the barrel side to side with your pinky.
It seemed to return to zero, but didn't give me a warm fuzzy feeling.

If I liked it enough to be set on it, I'd make up a bedding compound block up front to hold the barrel solid into the action.

The optic rail is part of the stock, and separate from the barreled action. If you press the barrel to the side, you can deflect the shot by many inches at 50 yards.
 
#22 ·
It didn't seem to make much difference while shooting, though I didnt keep it that long. I had a red dot on there, so I didn't check groups. With the green mountain barrel on it, it was an MOA gun previously.
The receiver seemed tight enough in the back, but the barrel end could deflect enough to touch each side of the exit hole at the end of the forend.

Best I can tell is the mounting area itself holding the receiver was flexing, the stock seemed solid enough.
My concern is if you set it in a position where the barrel tends to put weight one way, you'll lose zero over time. I sold it before I could test this out.

My 10/22 also has the older metal trigger group housing. I'm not sure if the plastic one would help it clamp tighter. I read online a few others noticed the movable barrel issue too.

-Dave
 
#23 ·
My fire control is Jim Clark 35 year old stuff when I did it myself because there was nothing like Kidd, etc.

It’s in a cast aluminum housing and still works like a charm. I use a Boresnake to clean ithe Beyer 18” lightweight threaded bull periodically.

No need to disassemble it for a thorough cleaning quite yet….
 
#24 ·
My rifle still has the old power custom trigger parts- also built long before the kidd stuff came out. 20" bull profile green mtn barrel. Maybe the heavy weight doesn't work well with the chassis.

I have it in a gray birch folding chassis now. It works well for the kids since you can collapse the stock down to fit.

In all of these, a pull through cleaner makes the most sense to avoid full disassembly. Unless you have a takedown