There is no defect to step up to.
I know it's the internet and people say all sorts of things without a factual basis, but I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and ask: why are you certain that there is no defect?
There is no defect to step up to.
I know it's the internet and people say all sorts of things without a factual basis, but I'll give you the benefit of the doubt and ask: why are you certain that there is no defect?
The issue is that the trigger assembly has an additional moving part. It isn't a defective part, or something that fails on its own. For failure to occur the additional part would have to be blocked by debris. All triggers can be malfunctioned by debris falling into just the right place at just the right time, the trigger in question has a higher chance of this malfunction because of an additional moving part. Sort of like an 8 cylinder motor has double the chance of an injector clogging than a 4 cyl motor because there are twice as many injectors.
Lawyers, and others in search of Remington's money believe they've found an angle to leverage that money away.
They are looking at one piece among many parts and saying the gun is unsafe because this one thing isn't as well designed as some other models. There are a bunch of other parts in this trigger assembly that make it very safe compared to other guns, but that doesn't seem to be discussed in any accusations. There are many makes and models of guns out there that are not nearly as safe as the 700.
Guns are expected to be clean and well taken care of. Remington and the like all publish instruction manuals on the frequency of cleaning, how to perform safety checks, and they are adamant that guns not ever be pointed at another person Especially when loading a round!!!
If it were truly a defect, it would have become common knowledge among the users long long ago. Its a news scare, hype thats all.
The only thing thats changed - is people now expecting guns to be safe, which is defective logic.
Contrast this with the M16 issues where imperfect cleaning lead to jams and failures to fire. So which would you prefer in a hunting rifle- a failure to fire or an unintended discharge?
The last battle rifle I liked was the M14. And I hunt with it (an M1A) still. :sombrero:
RULE# 3, DO NOT LET THE MUZZLE COVER ANYTHING YOU ARE NOT WILLING TO SEE DESTROYED.
Gunnslinger said:RULE# 3, DO NOT LET THE MUZZLE COVER ANYTHING YOU ARE NOT WILLING TO SEE DESTROYED.
I always thought that was Jeff Cooper's rule #2, right behind #1: "All guns are always loaded."
#3 is: "Keep your finger off the trigger until your sights are on the target."