Dan Hunter
Platinum Member
So I read that Remington is recalling hundreds of thousands of rifles built since 2006 because the glue (that they likely used to prevent owners from tampering with the trigger) is interfering with the proper operation and, though they didn't specify why, I seems the gun can discharge when disengaging the safety. I understand the process includes contacting them to determine in fact your rifle is included in the recall, receiving the shipping material, stripping your rifle of added hardware, shipping it, and waiting two months for them to remove the glue and return your rifle.
I've heard that some folks have received their returned rifle noticeably worse for wear. I have no idea how Remington is managing this but I can picture people disassembling rifles and throwing trigger assemblies in a bucket to solvent soak overnight. I can picture the triggers disassembled, separted into piles for cleaning, and reassembled with no chance you're getting your parts back.
I couldn't live with it. I've backordered a Jewel trigger. The rifle will sit until it arrives. It annoys me that it appears that Remington has been forced into action and chosen the least faithful method to resolve it. How about just offering to ship from their factory a NEW trigger? I don't care if it's "cost prohibitive"; they already have my money for a product they knew was dangerous.
They deserve a class action lawsuit; what they don't deserve is any more of my money. It saddens me because I recall receiving my first gun as a Christmas gift in 1967 - a 742 and I loved it and everything it would bring to my life as a young man.
I've heard that some folks have received their returned rifle noticeably worse for wear. I have no idea how Remington is managing this but I can picture people disassembling rifles and throwing trigger assemblies in a bucket to solvent soak overnight. I can picture the triggers disassembled, separted into piles for cleaning, and reassembled with no chance you're getting your parts back.
I couldn't live with it. I've backordered a Jewel trigger. The rifle will sit until it arrives. It annoys me that it appears that Remington has been forced into action and chosen the least faithful method to resolve it. How about just offering to ship from their factory a NEW trigger? I don't care if it's "cost prohibitive"; they already have my money for a product they knew was dangerous.
They deserve a class action lawsuit; what they don't deserve is any more of my money. It saddens me because I recall receiving my first gun as a Christmas gift in 1967 - a 742 and I loved it and everything it would bring to my life as a young man.