Re: Remington m700p big problems
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: jager247</div><div class="ubbcode-body">No troll here badshot
And I'm glad I could help with your fame and yes it was pretty harsh for my first post. well I guess that takes care of the welcome to the forums part.
I just don't see how this could happen so I called bs. In all my years of shooting and firearms training this has never been seen. The thing that ticks me off most about it is that you want to take legal action against someone. You remind me of the lady that spilled hot coffee on herself the sued mcd b/c there wasn't a label saying that the coffee is hot. Like with the hot coffee and your so called misshap it all falls back to operator error. Before shooting the gun and the ammo need to be checked over for proper workings. My guess is remington is going to find that the bolt was taken apart before it was shot and not put back together correctly. But you are someone that did that would never admit to that so we are back to square one all over again. Little tip for ya for free. Put your thumb alongside of the pistol grip. It can affect the rifles responds to recoil and can enlarge group size as much as .25 to .5 at 100 yards </div></div>for starters,we honored that you have graced us with all years of shooting and firearm training.second,the reason macdonalds lost that law suits was because it was proven that macdonalds at the corparate level had required their stores to keep coffee at or above 180 degrees so customers would have to take their coffe with them instead of drinking it all in the store and then getting a refill.third,i had a 1 month old sig 220 .45 acp blow up in my hand several years ago do to a factory double loaded pmc cartridge.no lawyer was needed,pmc took care of me and replaced the pistol,so accidents do happen with factory equipment.so before you jump on here with all your expertise,maybe you should let the facts unfold before you start calling people liars and sissy's and telling them how to shoot or how to hold their rifles.i've seen some the best rifle shooters in the world have different approaches to how they hold their rifles in both benchrest and f-class matches.
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: jager247</div><div class="ubbcode-body">No troll here badshot
And I'm glad I could help with your fame and yes it was pretty harsh for my first post. well I guess that takes care of the welcome to the forums part.
I just don't see how this could happen so I called bs. In all my years of shooting and firearms training this has never been seen. The thing that ticks me off most about it is that you want to take legal action against someone. You remind me of the lady that spilled hot coffee on herself the sued mcd b/c there wasn't a label saying that the coffee is hot. Like with the hot coffee and your so called misshap it all falls back to operator error. Before shooting the gun and the ammo need to be checked over for proper workings. My guess is remington is going to find that the bolt was taken apart before it was shot and not put back together correctly. But you are someone that did that would never admit to that so we are back to square one all over again. Little tip for ya for free. Put your thumb alongside of the pistol grip. It can affect the rifles responds to recoil and can enlarge group size as much as .25 to .5 at 100 yards </div></div>for starters,we honored that you have graced us with all years of shooting and firearm training.second,the reason macdonalds lost that law suits was because it was proven that macdonalds at the corparate level had required their stores to keep coffee at or above 180 degrees so customers would have to take their coffe with them instead of drinking it all in the store and then getting a refill.third,i had a 1 month old sig 220 .45 acp blow up in my hand several years ago do to a factory double loaded pmc cartridge.no lawyer was needed,pmc took care of me and replaced the pistol,so accidents do happen with factory equipment.so before you jump on here with all your expertise,maybe you should let the facts unfold before you start calling people liars and sissy's and telling them how to shoot or how to hold their rifles.i've seen some the best rifle shooters in the world have different approaches to how they hold their rifles in both benchrest and f-class matches.