Remington Arms Announces Voluntary Product Recall
April 11, 2014
Madison, N.C. - Remington Arms Company, LLC (“Remington”) today
announced a voluntary recall of Model 700™ and Model Seven™ rifles with
X-Mark Pro® (“XMP®”) triggers, manufactured from May 1, 2006 to April
9, 2014.
Senior Remington engineers determined that some Model 700 and Model
Seven rifles with XMP triggers could, under certain circumstances,
unintentionally discharge.
IN THE INTEREST OF SAFETY, THESE PRODUCTS ARE BEING RECALLED.
Remington’s investigation determined that some XMP triggers might have
excess bonding agent used in the assembly process, which could cause an
unintentional discharge. Therefore, Remington is recalling ALL
affected products to fully inspect and clean the XMP triggers with a
specialized process. Remington has advised customers to immediately
cease use of recalled rifles and return them to Remington free of
charge. The rifles will be inspected, specialty cleaned, tested, and
returned as soon as possible. Do not attempt to diagnose or repair
recalled rifles. Remington established a dedicated website and toll-free
hotline to help consumers determine whether their Model 700 or Model
Seven rifle(s) are subject to recall:
• Website: http://xmprecall.remington.com
• Toll-Free Hotline: 1-800-243-9700 (Prompt #3 then Prompt #1) Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. EDT.
The website and hotline provide guidance on returning recalled rifles
free of charge. “Remington takes safety extremely seriously,” said Teddy
Novin, Director of Public Affairs and Communications. “While we have
the utmost confidence in the design of the XMP trigger, we are
undertaking this recall in the interest of customer safety, to remove
any potential excess bonding agent applied in the assembly process. We
have established significant safety and technical resources to determine
which rifles are affected and to minimize any risks. Our goal is to
have every recalled firearm inspected, specialty cleaned, tested and
returned as soon as possible.”
“We’re putting our customers and their safety first by voluntarily
recalling all potentially affected rifles. We also want to take this
opportunity to remind everyone of the Ten Commandments of Firearm
Safety,” Novin concluded.
Found thanks to Kevin
2 comments:
Is that the trigger that there were several big law suits about after the person holding the gun was muzzle sweeping someone else when "it just went off"?
it sounds like it to me, maybe law suits were piling up and they finally decided they better do something about it.
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