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Varmiteer
I thought it was probably BS at first as well, but this has happened a lot, with that specific gun.
Sig actually settled one of the recent class-action suits a while ago, and in a public statement, said: "at certain angles and conditions, a potential discharge of the firearm may result when dropped."
I own zero Sig 320 guns, so I don't know how the FCG works, but they DID replace a bunch of pistols and parts for law enforcement agencies issuing them. Seems weird they would acknowledge a problem and send out a bunch of new guns without issuing a recall, so maybe it's limited to a specific range of serial numbers or production runs or something.
But seriously...if the firing pin / striker safety doesn't work when the gun is dropped, you don't have a firing pin safety. Seems like a fundamental part of a modern handgun design.
Last edited by VolksDragon; 08-25-2021 at 19:57.
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