csdilligaf
New member
I have been working on a new Sumo II design and nearly have the first one done for testing. I have made some design changes that I thought it needed. I have redid the entire Hammer so it it very light and short stroke for quick lock time. The action is now lower with the barrel clamps going vertical and the rail much closer to the barrel. It will have a balanced valve set up to allow the lighter hammer to open it easy. All this should mean less impact and vibration. The picatinny rail will be at 25 moa but will be in two pieces to allow more loading room. Also I have put a bleed off port in the side of the action to aid in de-gassing. This will allow removing the tube to work on the gun or the reg without having to mess with useing a hammer spring spacer to bleed down the presure. I have some more contour shaping on the side lever but that is just for looks.
So as for input from shooters, Would BR shooters mind the bolt and the cocking being two separate levers or movement? The Sumo II is still a single cocking and loading operation but I have found some advantages to makeing them separate. One being that I could use a stronger hammer spring with no preload and still make the cocking effort even lighter.
So as for input from shooters, Would BR shooters mind the bolt and the cocking being two separate levers or movement? The Sumo II is still a single cocking and loading operation but I have found some advantages to makeing them separate. One being that I could use a stronger hammer spring with no preload and still make the cocking effort even lighter.