However this would also suggest that many gun owners are in fact part of the general attitute of "I should be protected, even from myself"
Mike
I don't think it is indicative of the general attitude of hunters and gun owners, however. I am sure there are a few, but I feel the vast majority are still of the mind that people should act intelligently and take responsibility for their own stupid mistakes. Maybe I am an optimist though?
Canuck
[This message has been edited by Canuck (edited 01-01-2002).]
It's a very simple concept. Be honest and upfront about what you are building, state it clearly, and your duty to provide a safe product, and to inform the buyer, is done, if the product is safe for it's intended purpose.
If I remember correctly, in products it's called the implied warranty of suitability for the job intended. In other words, if you are IBM and you put out a POS hard drive, like the 75 GXP, and 40 % of them fail, you have breached your duty, since the implied product warranty is that it will perform reasonably, like other drives in the same category would.
If you have a gun design, where the trigger machine guns(some of us don't think that's a design flaw, but, that's another discussion),
you've breached that implied warranty.
I think reloading data books are actually on the safe side by nature. Reloading could be termed a naturally hazardous activity, and
due care should be exercized in developing loads, since you are working with explosives.
I think, and the reloading manuals generally do, advise the loader of all possible problems that might occur from misuse of the information they provide, and, they provide a manageable approach to developing loads, as well.
I think they do an effective job of transferring the liability on to the reloader.
As for triggers, I don't see why much more then a verbal warning, and something in writing, that the trigger is a match trigger, and easy to set off, is required.
It's the gun user that is not informed that is the problem.
One quick reloading story. I hate 9mm, but my boss used it for his sig sauer. I reloaded some ammo for him, using the maximum advised load for 9mm in the reloading book, at the time. He took it out to the range, and came back, gave me the gun, and the ammo, and told me to go shoot it.
Turns out the max load in this manual wouldn't even cycle the sig sauer...
I went to heavier bullets, and that solved the problem, since I wasn't jazzed about adding pressure, by upping the powder charge.
Thank God Saeed isn't in the US. All those guys shooting the 577 TREX might be sueing him, since they have no idea what they are getting into when they shoot the gun.
Of course, they have to have actual damage from the affair, and other then being embarassed, I don't see any.
gs