Originally Posted by Axtell
Either you don't know or do know and aren't saying. Wonder if Ruger made you sign a waiver for the new rifle.....you know one of those documents that say if you take the rifle they are absolved of any wrong doing.

Then there is Hornaday, if in fact the factory ammo was at fault any lawyer would take that one on contingency.

You decided the new rifle was compensation enough for your injuries. This is the part that makes me suspect of an operator error.

Did you flog the new Ruger? Do you still use Hornaday ammo?

I'm sure I am not the only one that would like to know the reason.

BTW they are still looking for MH-370 after 2 years, 777's don't just disappear as do rifles just don't blow up.


Axtell, why don't you STFU? I was there the day the rifle blew up, in fact my son who was 12 at the time was shooting the rifle a few minutes before it happened using the same ammo., and I was right behind him, looking over his shoulder. He's 23 now.

Huntsman did nothing other than load factory ammo into the rifle and pull the trigger.

There was also a gunsmith there who inspected the rifle right after it happened.

You sound like an old woman, always worrying about someone else's business. Why don't you go spend the evening weighing some powder down to the nearest 0.01 grain with your jeweler's scale, and load up a good half-dozen rounds?



A wise man is frequently humbled.