

As a bonus I joined a great forum and I learned y'all somethin bout my boom stick. my 887 works great), and it's a blast to shoot. The important things are Remington stepped up to the plate, I have a new trigger group spare worth 100 bones, my old trigger group was super easy to fix (i.e.


Think of it as routine maintenance, eventually we'll be the 887 experts. The 887 is truely a simple design, but as with all things mechanical I'm sure I'll be back here researching another issue as time goes on. We all are looking for answers so I'm giving back to those who replied to my problem. We all know what it feels like when things don't work as they should. I hope this post helps at least one more person. No worries! It was very easy to fix, irony is I needed the new part to see how the timing was off on the old part. Vmax wrote:Thanks for the great info and pics S Squirrel Prefer warranty if you have one, over here warranty works for crap so fixing these or atleast trying to fix them is less of a headache. If the action levers are timed wrong from the factory then it wont help.Īnyone doing this should be really careful, i have no idea how well the metal parts handle being forcefully twisted to another position. If the gun is letting multiple shells in you would have to do the opposite if the problem is on that part. I used pliers to make the profile of that small notch on the top of that rail a bit steeper to make it disengage more aggressively + moving the tip on the end that stops the shells closer to the edge so it doesnt need to be moved as much to let the shells pass.

You had the opposite problem, it was disengaged all the time letting all the shells through causing double feeds. The rail on right side of the trigger unit that prevents more than 1 round coming from the tube at once wasnt disengaging enough to let shells pass. Well it seems i was on the right track, ill try to explain how i fixed it.
