Sometimes events happen that need to be discussed but they are not. My Dad was a drill sergeant when it came to firearms safety. A key to a failure without injury was muzzle control. Failure to control the muzzle can lead to injury or death if other systems fail.
We were on a late hunt, Dad and his three teenage sons. The plan was to stay on rocky points and when legal shooting past for us to use flashlights to hike out. It has been many years but I believe the youngest was setting with Dad, and the middle and I out from them. Knowing that Dad would wave us in to start out soon I kind of kept an eye his direction.
We always unloaded our rifles before hiking out in the dark so I was waiting for him to unload. There was a muzzle flash in the sky and the report of the rifle. Nobody was hurt because of good muzzle control.
Unfortunately we lost a very good opportunity to learn more from this event. I believe Dad was shocked, and embarrassed as I would have been. All he would say about it was, he was unloading and the rifle went off.
It would have been better to catch his actions early while fresh.
The rifle was a Remington 722 the parent to today’s Remington 700 Short action. To open the action the user pushes the safety forward and lifts the bolt. I do not know what had happen before this.
Had Dad pressed on the trigger earlier “setting the trigger”? Did he have his finger in the trigger guard when he released the safety?
I know in the following days Dad spent a lot of time checking the rifle and safety.
Had he adjusted the trigger at sometime? I think not but I do not know the answer.
I have owned the rifle for over thirty years. I have open closed the action on an empty chamber, set the safety, and released the safety and the firing pin has not released. I have repeated the action but after setting the safety pressing the trigger, and then releasing the safety and the firing pin has not released. Dad may have taken the rifle to a local gunsmith to be checked out. Dad spent a far amount of time there.
Was the discharge cause by a tired man? Dad normally was up at 0400, make his breakfast and lunch and go to work at the factory. It was a small operation and he would push hard to get done in time to take us boys out for an evening hunt. Was he tired released the safety and had his finger in the trigger guard. I do not know.
Middle brother has been very critical of the incident. He and dad did not have a rosy relationship. He says dad had been fidgeting with the rifle while setting on the rock. I believe him.
But middle brother got a wakeup call. He now has a number of rifles built on short and long action Remington 700 actions. One day on the phone he tells me that he has been working on the trigger of Remington 700 BDL which he has purchased used as a project gun.
It gets scary because he asks me for advice on adjusting the trigger. Elder Brother Syndrome (EBS) surfaces and I advise him to use caution because there are already concerns regarding the trigger, and backyard mechanics work on it. I tell him to make sure it is safe by testing before chambering a live round in it.
A couple days later I get a phone call saying that he had an accidental discharge with the “tampered” rifle. He was target shooting, chambered a round, and set the safety. When he laid the rifle down it discharged. Nobody was hurt because the muzzle was point away from people.
Clearly his adjustment and testing was faulty. The accidental discharge is at his doorstep, not Remington’s
I remember a family making a lot of noise about unsafe Remington Rifles when one discharged. The loaded rifle was on the seat of a vehicle. Note that it is illegal to have a loaded firearm in a vehicle in most states. The victim grabbed the firearm by the muzzle and pulled in across the seat towards her causing it to discharge into her body. It was unknown if the safety was on and released because of the friction with the seat. Of course the family was blaming and suing Remington.
I have not watched the show, but I do have concerns. I will watch it at a later date.
I do have a Remington 700 with a heavy trigger pull. I would like a lighter trigger, but have not touched the trigger.
The wife is going to get tired me bouncing the butt of a Remington on the floor for a while.