American recall

RSIno1

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Why would you return a gun to Ruger so they can drill a hole that will vent directly into your face if a case ruptures?

Ruger Recalls Some American Rimfire Rifles

Ruger has announced a safety recall of some of their American Rimfire rifles in .17 HMR and .22 WMRF (Magnum) manufactured between November 17, 2013 and January 8, 2014. The recall is due to the lack of a hole that vents gas in case of an obstruction or case rupture.

From Ruger:
WHY ARE YOU RECALLING THESE RIFLES We have determined that Ruger American Rimfire™ rifles chambered in .22 WMRF (Magnum) and .17 HMR manufactured between November 17, 2013 and January 8, 2014 were manufactured without a vent hole. This hole appears just below and behind the serial number on the left-hand side of the receiver. The hole does not serve any function during normal operation of the rifle, but is a safety feature and may help vent gas in the event of a problem such as a ruptured case head or bore obstruction, for example. We want to recall the rifles and add the vent hole.

How to determine if your rifle needs the retrofit First, only Ruger American Rimfire™ rifles chambered in .22 WMRF (Magnum) and .17 HMR within the serial number range 830-34831 to 830-43880 are subject to the recall. If your rifle is chambered in .22 LR or falls outside of this serial number range, it is not subject to the recall. If you do have an Ruger American Rimfire™ rifle chambered in .22 WMRF (Magnum) or .17 HMR, you need only examine the left side of the receiver, just below and behind the serial number. If there is a hole there (Figure 1), then you do not need to return the rifle. If there is no hole (Figure 2), then the rifle should be returned.
 
RSIno1 said:
Why would you return a gun to Ruger so they can drill a hole that will vent directly into your face if a case ruptures?

It doesn't vent directly in your face, it vents sideways and ahead of your face. Vent holes in the receiver ring are very common in both rimfire and centerfire rifles and every rifle I've seen by every maker has them. The lack of that hole means escaping gas goes directly back through the firing pin channel and that does endanger the shooter.
 
The hole is a safety feature to allow gas a safe direction to vent in the unfortunate happenstance of an over-pressure event.
 
blume357 said:
Sounds Like they don't have enough to do to me or their bean counters and lawyers got bored....
It sounds more like someone in the design group or machine shop got distracted. This could be a no-joke hazard if not corrected.
 
22/45 Fan said:
blume357 said:
Sounds Like they don't have enough to do to me or their bean counters and lawyers got bored....
It sounds more like someone in the design group or machine shop got distracted. This could be a no-joke hazard if not corrected.

Exactly...because that's when the bean-counters do get worried because there's a lot of lawyers out there who love nothing more than to fill their pockets.
Chet15
 
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It is a "safety recall". Should you have a case rupture and chose not to send it back, Ruger is absolved of liability for injuries or damages. Just like the OM conversion, etc.
You shoot the gun without the recall mods, you roll your own dice.

-If that is "just filling lawyer's pockets"... Nah. I'd say they are protecting the company, exactly what they get paid for in these times of "I wanna sue everybody".
Of course would you own Ruger shares if they DIDN'T have active attorneys? Think about it - lawyers don't create manufacturing errors and shortcuts; they protect the company (shareowners) from them. -Working for Ruger I'd opine they have no worry of job security!
 
I posted this quite a while back:

http://www.rugerforum.com/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=32&t=187426&p=1960322&hilit=recall#p1960322
 
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