July 17th, 2008, 01:49 PM
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#35
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New Member
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Third Planet From the Sun.
Posts: 7
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Well Stated!!!
Quote:
Originally Posted by HotGuns
Good article with great pictures.
A few observations...
FN is not taking you seriously. You used reloaded ammunition and as far as they are concerned, its your problem, not theirs. Proof of this is in their response and dealings with you.
It seems that you have a well documented case. However, firing out of battery is pure speculation...unless you have some expert metallurgists examine the gun and document their results.Results that could be called upon in court.
A cheaper way to see if it fired out of battery would be to obtain a new pistol and load some rounds with nothing but primers and then see if you could in fact get the gun to fire out of battery. If it does, there is your proof of a design flaw.
I don't doubt your assessment, but most manufacturers take many precautions to insure that a gun does not fire out of battery. If you can duplicate this, and it does indeed fire out of battery, then that is a design flaw and one that can easily be reproduced in court if need be.
Do not send the gun or its parts back to FN. If it is needed as proof later on, they are under no legal prerogative to keep it. They will simply log it as a destroyed gun and chunk the parts. They know this and will use it to their advantage.
Talk to them in language that they will understand and respond to. Send them a registered letter with the signature of your lawyer on it.
I guarantee you that will wake them up.
I am not a lawyer,nor do I pretend to be one, and if anyone even accuses me of acting like one, I will beat them until they cant walk. What I have proposed is the smart thing to do in the event that FN fails to make you happy.
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Well stated Hotguns! I second your advise.
Regards,
Defensor Pacis
__________________
Evil triumphs when good people do nothing!
Train Hard, Fight Easy!
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