Ok I took a look at that article and have a couple of comments about it.
I have a MH-18 in .222 Rem that was sold under the name Baikal here in the UK. Baikal is a trade name the plant which made the rifle is Izhmash denoted by the arrow in the shield logo. The fail to fire is a result of the operator and yes I had it happen a couple of times and it's due to an automatic safety built into the action and normally is caused by not shutting the action sharply enough. We try to "baby" it for quietness as it's a rifle something we tend not to do with a shotgun and the MH18 is derived from a shotgun after all
.
The trigger pull is rather heavy and I don't know why this should be as the shotguns are not like it at all and yes I have a few of them, two of the 12b ones and a 20b that I picked up for walking the field with and very useful they are too and they all have good triggers as they came to me. Now the rifle I lightened it by shortening the coil spring slightly but I will have to have another look and see if I cannot remove the creep from the trigger. the shotguns don't have any so why should the rifle?
As for accuracy well it's certainly not bad at all:-
As this shows and with factory ammunition as well. Now I didn't like that angular style to the forestock nor the unfinished look to the butt so I re-shaped it more to my liking
Remington is squarely to blame for a lot of the issues with the Spartan as they set a price they are willing to pay and Izhmash has to meet it if it wants the orders. As for the scope rail
oh come on get real:-
Before the re-shaping it had a 6x40 scope on it held by Steel Hilver rings. The Hilvers are not sold under the B-Square Lynx brand. I don't like nor rate the weaver rails or mounts
. As for Remington one cannot expect much from them really after all they are still fitting dangerous Trigger and safeties to the Rem 700 are they not? I thought it was standard practice to buy a Rem 700 they either have it re-built or replace most of the cheap and shoddy bits with customs one. First thing to go is the trigger it seems followed by the stamped out bit of plate they call a recoil lug
. Which is why we don't see many Remingtons on the range or in the field after all why bother?
It would not surprise me one bit it the holding company which now owns Remington didn't sell off the land it sits one and shut it down.
Edit:- Oh almost forgot I am looking at fitting a sporting aperture/reciever sight to mine
I have a Lyman 57SME and a a Parker-Hale P-H 17B which look promising
.