Re: Remington accused of 700 series dangerous flaws
Here's some Remington Documents for all to read:
Remington 1979-1980 Internal Memo's
In summary, and copied from the legal brief's:
<span style="font-style: italic">The Defect
1. Remington’s trigger mechanism uses an internal component called a “connector” – a design component not used by any other rifle manufacturer. The connector floats on top of the trigger body inside of the gun, but is not physically bound to the trigger in any way other than tension from a spring. When the trigger is pulled, the connecter is pushed forward by the trigger, allowing the sear to fall and fire the rifle.
2. The proper position of the connector under the sear is an overlap of only 25/1000ths of an inch, but because the connector is not bound to the trigger, the connector separates from the trigger body when the rifle is fired and creates a gap between the two parts.
3. Any dirt, debris or manufacturing scrap can then become lodged in the space created between the connector and the trigger, preventing the connector from returning to its original position.
4. Remington’s defective fire control could have been redesigned to eliminate the harm or danger very inexpensively. There is no valid engineering reason why the successfully utilized connectorless designs could not have been used by Remington in its Model 700 and 710.
5. In fact, Remington has recently done just that for the Model 700 with a newly designed trigger, the X-Mark Pro. That design, which eliminates the connector, was completed in 2002. However, Remington chose to continue with its prior unsafe design for financial reasons, never warning the public. Even today, Remington installs the new fire control into some but not all of its bolt-action rifles, leaving many users at risk with the old and defective design.
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As for myself, I will continue to use the Remington 700, but I will not use the "old style" Remington (Mike Walker designed) trigger. I have for the last 20 years, always replaced my Remington trigger with a Timney trigger, as I do not trust the original Remington 700 trigger "as designed".
Other shooters should use what is comfortable and safe for them. Regardless of which trigger is chosen, good safe gun handling always comes first.
Regards,
Bob