Well... is it possible that the internal action wrench caused the damage when it exerted pressure against the lug raceways...at the the point they meet the internal lug surfaces? Could this have been done during a previous rebarrel?an internal one.Your thoughts?
Not sure who you spoke with...years ago I had a problem with a Remington 7600...called the Canadian service and got an aggressive ####### who blamed me for the problem and denied any warranty coverage. I called US factory and they couldn't have been more helpful!! Sent them the rifle and it came back like new and has functioned fine! OTOH some years before this I stupidly launched my tube magazine spring, it's cap and my three round plug from an 1100 Rem shotgun some distance into the bush (never to be found again!) and when I called the Canadian distributor to order new parts....they sent to me NO CHARGE!!! So needless to say I am a Remington 'fanboy'!!!not interested. cant see how that would have been done by them. just blowing me off. bet customer service handled it and not a service person
Well... is it possible that the internal action wrench caused the damage when it exerted pressure against the lug raceways...at the the point they meet the internal lug surfaces? Could this have been done during a previous rebarrel?
It isn't possible for an internal wrench to go in that far with a barrel installed.
It isn't possible for an internal wrench to go in that far with a barrel installed.
as above. not possible the internal wrench did it. i have to email remington as im in NZ. The NZ distributors could care less and USA says i have to go through them due to being international
I am not sure what their current policy is regarding warranty after a barrel removal... but good luck with Remington.
I still think they are a pretty good firm.