Augustis,
I thank you for your efforts to try and disseminate this information about the trigger problems in the Remingtons. I can't imagine how much time and money you have spent to research this information, but think it is an incredible thing that you are making the attempt to educate the members of this site. Don't let the blatant ignorance of some dissuade you from your efforts. There were those that thought the automobile would never overtake the horse, and that man would never fly much less land on the moon, and there's no way that internet thing will ever work! It is amazing to see such blind ingnorance of fact though, this denial is something in a class all of its own!
Anyway, I have personally had a non-intentional discharge, and personally witnessed another both from Remington 700s. I have also talked with two other individuals with similar instances. One guy told me his father shot through their windshield with a 700, the other guy I just talked to recently, and I tried to convince him to replace his trigger. His thought was that it just needs to be looked at by a gunsmith, which while the gunsmith may re-adjust and clean the trigger, won't cure the problem, only delay the instance of another non-intentional discharge, and I pray that he or whomever owns the rifle will be following Remingtons "laws of gun safety" when it does indeed happen again.
I can't understand why people won't recognize this problem?? Even when presented with facts that can't be disputed, folks continue to deny that a problem exists?? Even when Remington does a recall so they can attempt to limit their liability, no one is listening?? Even when shown information that proves Remington recognizes the problem and has chosen to settle vs fixing the problem, we don't demand a fix??
As witnessed by the millions of rifles in the public, we have funneled billions of dollars into this company, and they have made a decision based first on pennies, and later on millions to go the route of the bottom line. They put a dollar value on your and my lives, in an equation, and the cost of lives vs the cost of recall won out. That makes me sick to my stomach. By Remington's own conservative estimate, there are 1% dangerous rifles in the market, with 5 million sold that means 50,000 or more are prone to fire un-intentionally... where are they? I hope we all think of that fact when we are out hunting or shooting with a rifle wearing a trigger connector fire control. I pray for all of you, even you Swampy, that you never have a loved one, or even someone innocent nearby to you that ends up getting injured or even killed due to a ND. The problem is small enough to Remington they will not fix it, but I can guarantee if the problem happens to you, it will seem like a lot bigger problem... Like said somewhere before, this can be a potential life changing issue.... and it changes peoples lives every year, but I guess as long as it doesn't happen to me, I have no obligation to try and change it, or even recognize it...
Also BTW, cutting the bolt lock off the safety doesn't fix the problem, it mainly allows you to circumvent the potential for it to happen, even this doesn't prevent the gun from ND, but will allow you to open the bolt while it is still on 'safe' to unload. The removal of the bolt lock is definately a must, but that doesn't change the inherent danger designed right into the trigger connector. It only circumvents one side effect of its design.
Final thought: Be careful, and just get a new trigger, a Shilen replacement can be had for $75... how much is preventing even a 1% chance that someone you love will be injured worth?
Dave