Dear Guys,
You are going to have to explain this one to me. Every time I read a review about the Mini-14, I see the comment that if the firing pin breaks, you can't buy a new one, and you have to send the rifle back to Ruger to get it replaced.
So, my question is, why doesn't somebody just make replacements? Are you telliing me that if a guy is a metal smith, with some CNC equipment, he can't copy and makes something as ridiculously simple as a firing pin? On the cable shows, I see those folks at the custom gunshop in Louisianna make entire rifles, including the receivers, in the back of their shop with their CNC equipment.
And if a smith can make one, then he can surely make a couple of hundred and sell them. Given the tens of thousands of Minies out there, and this nagging problem, I'll bet he would sell them all in very short order.
So, what kind of BS is this, that a firing pin is so "complicated" that only Ruger can make them?
The only possible reason I can think of, is that perhaps the pin is of such a unique design, that it was patented, and so only licensee's of Ruger's patent can make them. Hard to believe, especially since the Mini design is now going on 40 years old.
So, again, what gives?
Mannyrock