Logan, What you describe is no surprise. The Accutrigger is doing what it is designed to do. If you want to slam your bolt down as fast and as hard as you can you are only asking for this condition to rear its ugly head and you will kill someone with a trigger without the Accutriggers safety feature. They designed it to protect people that like to operate their rifles that way. If you purchase a non Accutrigger to replace yours there will more than likely be an accidental discharge that could end in a disaster. If you need to shoot multiple rounds at a high rate of fire you might consider a semi auto.
It boils down to trade offs. If you lighten the trigger your chances of upsetting the delicate engagement of the trigger to the sear. It is the nature of the beast. Spring tension/preload is what holds it all together. If that tension is light for a low trigger pull then just a bump of the rifle will cause the trigger and sear to become disengaged. This is not a problem if you are operating it normally. You must increase the trigger pull weight to compensate for the radical slamming of the bolt. Otherwise it trips and the safety blade catches it.
Now it seams that with all of the swapping back and forth you have ended up with more issues. I wish you good luck. Some kind hearted guy will walk you through the needed adjustment to get you back to original condition.
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