Dick Unger wrote:I've got a mid 60's 700. It's a great trigger. If I do the modification will it affect the trigger?
The show explained, if memory serves, that they modified the trigger as per the 1947 recommendation of the designer, but that they still market 700's with the new trigger and those with the old trigger.
I was ready to write all of this off as so much hogwash until (UNTIL) they showed the military types, on government ranges, demonstrating the rifles discharging by merely moving the safety from "on" to "off". They refer to it (mocking Remington's publicity campaign) the "Remington Moment". The cause seems to be this:
The inside of the trigger mechanism is closed making it inaccessible for visual inspection. What happens is that over time lubricants turn into a goo and gum up the trigger and safety mechanism preventing proper movement. The goo gets behind one of the trigger parts, throwing it out of alignment. The trigger sear doesn’t reset properly. When the safety is pushed to fire, or if the rifle is being unloaded, because the sears are in an open position it enables the firing pin to fall as if the trigger was pressed/pulled.
If the rifle is kept as pristine as it was new, apparently there is no problem. Dirt, corrosion, goo? = You get an unwanted "bang".
PS: I know the difference between CNBC, MSNBC, and NBC. My distain is focused on the NBC part. It is exacerbated by the MS part.
