i think anytime something is produced in high numbers this can happen. firearms have been mass produced, based on the technology of the day, for over a hundred years.
you can mass produce a gun yet still maintain a high level of quality.
the problem is that in the last couple of decades most gun manufacturers have taken more and more drastic cost-cutting measures.
what compounds the problem is that the consumer doesnt complain, and swallows the bullsh*t justifications and marketing surrounding the cost-cutting measures hook line and sinker:
cheap flimsy synthetic stocks:
'lightweight, tactical'
plastic triggerguards:
'ultra-lightweight, tactical'
bead-blasted POS matte bluing or matte finish:
'low-glare, tactical'
plastic receiver sleeve:
'low-friction, self-lubricating tactical composite bushing'
plastic mechanism parts in general:
'self-lubricating, rustproof'
short action using long-action receiver w/bolt stop:
'innovative receiver design'
i could go on and on. i think what infuriates me the most is when i read about
'self-lubricating, rustproof' plastic parts on a rifle. its a goddamn POS m#@$erfu#$ing plastic garbage part, and people should be demanding better, but they swallow the marketing bullsh*t. (sorry this is a real sore point for me)
i own a few 'tactical' rifles, but honestly IMO the tactical fad of the last couple decades is what killed gun quality. 'tactical' was a godsend for firearms manufacturers since they could now pass off sh*t plastic parts instead of metal and wood. they could now take a barrel and action straight off the mill and bead blast the sh*t out of it, then spraypaint it black with some cheap gun coat finish, and it sold like hotcakes because it was 'tactical'. people actually
preferred the rust-magnet matte bluing and a cheap plastic stock. ive lost count of how many new guns i have examined whose matte blued crappy finish is already rusting in their factory boxes.
an 18 year old new shooter going out and buying a new shotgun will pick up a Remington 870 Express synthetic and assume that this is a quality gun because of the pedigree and praise the 870 has gotten over the last half century, and because he has little basis of comparison other than
other new production guns which share the same cost-cutting features. if he picked up an old wingmaster (not a new one) alongside it, he would realise that theyre not even remotely the same gun.
unfortunately the consumer is to blame for the state of factory gun quality, materials and fit & finish today.