I spoke to Steve and we both agreed this needs to be shared. While hunting Sunday morning my shotgun discharged. Yes the safety was on, it was still on after the discharge. We were walking on a fire road we stopped to take a picture of Henshaw and bam! The muzzle was pointing down stock at my shoulder strap going over the back of my shoulder. I carry this way due to my conditions should my legs fail(which happens). This was witnessed the point I'm trying to get at is no matter what precautions you take, anything can happen at anytime. I got lucky! Only 30 or so shot in my foot and some burning. The manufacturer has been notified and an investigation will be starting either Tuesday or Wednesday.
ALWAYS practice muzzle control, trigger discipline and ALWAYS have your safety on until ready to fire. Even though mine failed. This was a lower end Shotgun but regardless the trigger group should never have failed especially with only 300 or so rounds through her.
Another life saver was knowing my coordinates, thanks to onXmaps. We were almost a mile from East Grade. Knowing this greatly improved response time.
So let the comments begin. I'm hoping that this is received as a reminder of safety. Firearms are mechanical and mechanisms fail. So the best safety is you.
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ALWAYS practice muzzle control, trigger discipline and ALWAYS have your safety on until ready to fire. Even though mine failed. This was a lower end Shotgun but regardless the trigger group should never have failed especially with only 300 or so rounds through her.
Another life saver was knowing my coordinates, thanks to onXmaps. We were almost a mile from East Grade. Knowing this greatly improved response time.
So let the comments begin. I'm hoping that this is received as a reminder of safety. Firearms are mechanical and mechanisms fail. So the best safety is you.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk