Buddy insisted I shoot his Remington 700 tonight; I’ve been vaguely aware that 700s have some potential issues with slam fires and trigger malfunctions, particularly in crappy weather, but had never seen it myself.
Bluebird day here today. Buddy handed me the rifle, I partially opened the bolt to see if there was a round chambered (there was), closed bolt, got in the scope, finger straight and off the trigger. As I pushed the safety forward, the rifle discharged. I did not squeeze, brush, breath on, or otherwise do anything to influence the trigger. The rifle discharged as the safety disengaged. Surprised the hell out of me. No one was hurt though, thankfully.
Questions:
Bluebird day here today. Buddy handed me the rifle, I partially opened the bolt to see if there was a round chambered (there was), closed bolt, got in the scope, finger straight and off the trigger. As I pushed the safety forward, the rifle discharged. I did not squeeze, brush, breath on, or otherwise do anything to influence the trigger. The rifle discharged as the safety disengaged. Surprised the hell out of me. No one was hurt though, thankfully.
Questions:
- Is this a known issue with 700s, outside of extreme adverse conditions? Trigger has not been lightened or otherwise worked on, at least in the 6+ years my buddy has had it. As far as we know, this is the first time it’s happened with this rifle.
- How do I fix it? I’m imagining breaking the whole thing down, cleaning with brake cleaner and reassembling. Is that the way, or a waste of time?
- Would an aftermarket trigger assembly be any better (safer) than factory?