winchester_070 said:
I keep hearing about all the Sako style failures , can someone please post some actual failures or refer to lawsuites that have proven that these failures have caused injuries . I have not been able to find any in any of my searches on the inet but would love to read or hear about actual events and not hearsay or someones opinion , not that there is anything wrong with opinions,but sometimes things get carried away and stories get bigger and bigger until there is very little truth left at all . I have 3 bolts that i am considering putting in sako extractors and if they truly are unsafe (proven) then i will have to be reconsidering.
If you don't understand that the design of the 700 action is superior to any other mass produced bolt action ever made, and that by installing only part of the extractor system from a Sako completed compromises that design, what does it matter if there have been deaths and injuries? It is not like it happens often..... the alteration does not make it happen. The alteration is completely unsafe when it happens. We are talking about a catastrophic case failure. They do not occur on a regular basis.
If you think a Sako extractor is safe in a Sako so why shouldn't it be safe in a Remington, you are wrong because when people install the Sako extractor in a Remington they do not install the Sako bolt guide, which is the safety design incorporated in the Sako. That bolt guide is there to protect the shooter and anyone close to the shooter if a case fails drastically. I do not understand why anyone would knowingly install only part of the Sako system. If the Sako extractor and the Sako bolt guide were installed then the Remington would be as safe as a Sako. Not as strong and safe as the Remington was before alteration but safe.
After working on so many rifles over so many years and seeing so little problems with the 700 extractors, it really boggles my mind that there have been so many unsafe conversions done... I think it started with the blind leading the blind and the lemmings following. By lemmings I mean the regular shooter who does not have a clue as to what the alteration is doing. They are just doing the conversion without really making an informed decision.
Thankfully case failures are not common.
Following are two old posts from Benchrest Central where this topic has been covered quite some time ago.
jackie schmidt Registered User Join Date: Feb 2003Location: Houston, TexasPosts: 3872
JKob
Yes, I have first hand knowledge of a Sako Extractor in a Remington Bolt imbedding itself in a man’s brain.
It was a unique circumstance. He was a left-handed shooter shooting a 243 Ackley built on a right hand action. One hot day at the range, he was shooting 70-grain bullets with a big dose of 4350. He decided to go to some (about) 100 grainers, but forgot to lower the charge. The case failed, and the Sako Extractor came right up the race way and into his head. It hurt him pretty bad. The case head was literally welded to the bolt face.
I guess that is first hand enough........jackie
Lou Murdica Registered User Join Date: Feb 2003Location: SKY VALLEY CA.Posts: 185
blow out
I had a Remington 40x in a 222 with a Sako extractor conversion have a catastrophic case head failure and blow the extractor out the port, break into pieces when it hit the back of the port
and part of it is still in my head. If it was a left port I would be dead. I had glasses on and there was brass pit in them and my face was bleeding all around them. It was not a hot load but just a weak case they say.