Things You May Not Have Known About The Remington Walker Fire Control System
BY Herschel Smith9 years, 4 months ago
Over the years, Barber has amassed a mountain of documents, including internal memos from Remington and thousands of consumer complaints, that he said show that the company knew about the flaw with the trigger mechanism, known as the Walker Fire Control, and did nothing about it.
“I believe that I am quite capable of defending myself with Remington’s own documents, which speak for themselves and clearly speak volumes about what the company knew, when they knew it and what they did or did not do with that body of knowledge,” said Barber.
Remington has adamantly denied that the Walker Fire Control is defective. But the company has agreed to replace millions of trigger mechanisms in its top-selling bolt action rifles as part of a class-action lawsuit settlement
The details of the settlement are still being worked out in federal court and aren’t expected to be released until December of 2015. But we do know that Remington does not want the trigger replacement program to be labeled a recall. Also, part of the deal is that Remington does not have to admit that its products are defective or concede to wrongdoing.
That does not sit well with Barber.
“Until Remington at least quits denying a problem and wrongdoing, the cycle of death and injury will just continue,” said Barber.
Barber said he wants Remington to come clean about the history of problems with the model 700 rifle.
He showed MTN an internal memo from 1990 that says, “the number of model 700 rifles being returned to the factory because of alleged accidental firing malfunctions is constantly increasing.”
The memo was dated January 25 and already 29 rifles had been returned that month.
Barber also released to MTN a confidential document on testing done within Remington’s own facility. It advised the tester to wear a glove for protection and “be prepared for the rifle to inadvertently follow down or fire.”
“Remington goes as far as telling their own employees, as shown in that document, they warn them,” said Barber. “They tell them to be prepared for the gun to fire during testing, but yet they deny this fact to the public?”
They prepared their own gunsmiths to expect the rifle to “inadvertently fire” during testing. I had not heard this before, even though I have linked a good bit of evidence (likely obtained initially by Barber) in previous posts. It might actually have been interesting and enlightening for the case to go forward to court to see how Remington reacted.
I had also intended to mention that Jack Belk sent me his book (personally signed) entitled Unsafe by Design: Forensic Gunsmithing and Firearms Accident Investigations. It’s written in a breezy, conversational style with lots of pictures and technical explanation. The section on the Walker fire control system beckons me again, since it’s involved enough to read through a second time. I highly recommend Jack’s book.
On July 22, 2015 at 10:45 am, Ned Weatherby said:
I’ve personally seen the problems associated with Remington 700 triggers. Recommend people replace with Timney or other triggers. It’s a little disconcerting when a Remington 700 in 8mm Mag fires when it’s not supposed to. Of course following safety rules is imperative, but a defective trigger is eventually gonna cause harm to someone, somewhere.
Not calling this a recall – which in my view would do no PR harm to Remington – is typical Lawyeresque, weasel worded mealy-mouthed doublespeak. Second-hand buyers need to know about this. Notifications in gun magazines and gun shops regarding this issue could just prevent someone, somewhere, from suffering harm.
So it costs Remington some bucks. If they’d fixed this problem when they first knew about it, it wouldn’t be a problem for them now.