There isn't a problem and there won't be a recall.
Swampman - Are you speaking on behalf of the Company again??? As usual you are WRONG, it was a horse trailer as the other gentleman indicated!!
What the show failed to expose is NEW rifles inside the plant malfunctioning, in the same manor as the claims by Remington's valued customers in the filed.
The argument(s) that have been raised in this thread seems strikingly similar to our terrorist enemies in the would, that being, "Its a holy war", or in this instance an attack on our rights to bear arms - It appears to be an effective ploy directed at those who will not take the time to look at the evidence, but the argument does not hold water... If NOT us, who bears the responsibility to address an issue of this nature, Who's responsibility, if not ours is to protect other gun owners from accidents through education of the facts related to an issue like this that can & will potentially lead to hunting related accidents in the future?
The primary reason that the officers/agents documented malfunctions in their Sniper rifles was of course for liability reasons, to protect the operators & agencies in the event of an inadvertent discharge during a call out. The chief of Police reports that the fire controls in their Sniper Rifles have NOT been tampered with, so that in part blows the theory that ONLY a bad trigger job can & will result in an inadvertent discharge in Remington rifles…
http://www.pressherald.com/news/craig-faulty-rif-les-taken-out-of-police-service_2010-10-28.html I believe the disclosure of facts in the documentary were well within the middle or the road, sticking to the "evidence" that supported not only the claims made by Mike Walker (who I know personally), but the FACT that we as a community (& I use the term loosely) bear an obligation to address an issue of such a serious nature - if we do not - then who will do it for us... like it or not, those are the options we are faced with. Education Beats Future Regulation!!
For those that have indicated problems with 600 series rifles, here are some facts that may, or may not be of interest to you:
In 1975, Remington conducted a "special safety audit" on M/600 series rifles. What sparked this audit was yet another complaint from the field, from a customer that reported his rifle fired on safety release, which Remington terms an "FSR". When the rifle was returned for "examination by Remington experts", to their dismay, they realized the condition could be duplicated!!
Remington began testing warehouse product - & ultimately determined that a significant percentage of rifles in the warehouse could be "tricked" into firing when the safety was released. If memory serves me correctly, only 26% of the rifles in the warehouse DID NOT exhibit the characteristic to fire on safety release after a sequence of manipulation of the trigger & safety was performed. So if 26% would not fail the test, that would indicate 74% of the sample tested DID!!
Further, Remington decided to test a sample of rifles that had been shipped to wholesalers -NIB- that had been shipped between given months of production. They felt that this would allow them to determine "how far wide spread" the defect was within the product line that had made it to the wholesale level. With that said, Remington gathered a sample of 615 rifles. Keeping in mind this is 1975, the final results of the audit revealed that "55.9%" of the sample could be tricked into firing when the safety was released.
For the record, Remington DID NOT issue a warning, or recall on the product line at this time, but did begin development of alternative designed fire controls that would mitigate the potential for such malfunctions to occur in the "M/600 & M/700" product lines.
The company failed to issue any kind of warning, or recall until October 1978. What ultimately caused the company to come to their senses was an incident where a 15 year old child, Will Coates in the process of unloading his 600 rifle shot his father, John Coates through the spine. Mr. Coates was a defense trial lawyer from the Texas area. The incident was witnessed by a friend of the Coates family, a Judge. The Judge testified that the youth did not contact the trigger at any time prior to the discharge that severed his father spine.
To make a long story short, Remington's insurance carrier settled the case for a disclosed 6.8 million dollars in 1978, three years AFTER determining a significant quantity of rifles tested could fire on safety release. The case, as well as the settlement received wide publicity by the media, the companies insurance carrier ultimately dropped the companies liability insurance coverage. Now with the cat out of the bag regarding the defect & without liability insurance coverage Remington was forced to recall center fire bolt action rifles & pistol with "similar fire control systems" built under the Walker/ Haskell Patent - Dated July 11, 1950 - Pat. # 2,514,981.
The day after the announcement of the settlement Remington recalled the 600 series rifles & the XP-100 bolt action pistol. The recall targeted roughly 250,000 units in the field, but NOT the M/700 rifles. By this time in history, Remington had produced roughly 2 million M/700 rifles in contrast to the 600 series rifles, which included the M/600 - M/660 - Mohawk 600 & the XP-100 collectively. Ultimately the recalled 600 series rifles were fitted with a modified M/700 fire control system, which in fact has exhibited the same forms of malfunctions as the 600 rifles. The fact of the matter is every center fire rifle that Remington has produced since March 1948 has been plagued with these forms of malfunction - Fire on safety release "FSR" - Fire on bolt opening "FBO" - Fire on bolt closure "FBO" & Jar Off "JO" (Rifle firing when bumped, or dropped)
There is of course more to this story, but I think I will allow everyone to digest these factors before writing any more details surrounding this issue.
Last thing I would like to point out in this post, I copied the CNBC piece & have watched it several times personally - I have also watched the M/700 tv response... the way I see it, the journalist Mr. Cohen, in fact appears to have his trigger finger on the front of the trigger guard! Note the extension of the trigger finger, it appears straight to me.... More smoke & mirrors & further deception from Remington to distract you from the real issue - the documents that were produced as evidence to support Mike Walker among others???
Aug ><>