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A Remington Model 700 7mm-.08 is seen resting against a tree. This model of bolt-action rifle is eligible for a new trigger mechanism under a class-action lawsuit settlement granted final approval ...
The settlement covers Remington’s Model 700, as well as these other firearms: Seven, Sportsman 78, 673, 710, 715, 770, 600, 660, 721, 722 and 725 rifles, and the XP-100 bolt-action pistol.
The company is voluntarily recalling its Remington Model 700 and Model Seven rifles with X-Mark Pro, otherwise known as XMP, triggers. The recall is effective for guns manufactured from May 1, 2006 to ...
The Remington Arms Co. has reached a nationwide settlement of claims that most of its Model 700 bolt-action hunting rifles have a defective trigger mechanism — a settlement likely to ...
What Roger didn't know was that by then Remington had gotten some 200 complaints claiming just that about rifles like Zac's, with a trigger mechanism called the X-Mark Pro. Six months after Justin ...
Remington Arms Company is recalling Model 700 and Model 7 rifles with X-Mark Pro triggers that were manufactured between May 1, 2006 and April 9, 2014.
One wonders what Remington plans for the 50th anniversary of this classic rifle in 2012. The Model 700 BDL shown here is chambered in .25-’06 Rem. and is topped with a Bushnell Banner 4-12X scope.
The actions used by Remington in several other firearms are nothing less than modified versions of the Model 700 action. They include the 40X, Model 600 Model Seven rifles and the XP-100 pistol.
The lawsuit says more than 5 million Model 700 bolt-action rifles have been sold since 1962. Barber’s 9-year-old son, Gus, was killed by a Model 700 rifle in a 2000 hunting accident in Montana.
Roger, a powerline construction foreman from Enon, Mississippi, owned a Remington Model 700 rifle. And he bought another one for his older, then 12-year-old son, Zac.