The angle is wrong on the Coopers, they're not perpendicular to the bore and they're not safe below about 1.5lb with the overtravel set to not steer the rifle.
BTW it's perty easy to shoot 1/4moa with a 3lb trigger......
You have lost me, it sounds like your respone is slanted more to benchrest triggers rather than hunting rifle triggers. Would you please clarify your comment about the angle being wrong on Coopers? What angle? If you are speaking of the trigger sear and firing pin sear they are 90 degree angles, not an override trigger like the Remington, is that what you are referring to? If so what is wrong with a 90 degree angle?
I am really confused about not being "perpendicular to the bore", what is not perpendicular to the bore and why is it a problem?
As far as safety, I run most of mine at 1.5#'s with no issues at all, they do not slam fire, they are extremely consistent. My 6PPC Cooper is set at a10 ounces and it performs properly with no issues.
I also need some clarification on your comment about the overtravel set to not steer the rifle, are you referring to benchrest triggers rather than hunting triggers.
Neither the Cooper or Sako have benchrest triggers but IMO they are a great, easily adjustable, very consistent trigger and since this is the Hunting Rifle forum I assume that we are speaking in the context of a hunting rifle trigger, not a bench rest trigger.
Perhaps my reading comprehension is off tonight but I am totally confused about the points you are trying to make in your reply, or was your response in jest?
drover
p.s. - "BTW it's perty easy to shoot 1/4moa with a 3lb trigger......" - you are kidding, right? We both know that it is difficult to shoot consistent 1/4" groups even with a benchrest rifle.