Gun Defects Hit 40% Rate
-
Gun Defects Hit 40% Rate
Image: The Trace
Forty percent of new firearms contain defects—a failure rate that would kill any other consumer industry. The gun industry's own trade group acknowledges this staggering statistic, prompting even pro-gun outlets to wonder how manufacturers survive such widespread quality control failures.
Unlike every other consumer product, firearms face zero federal health and safety regulation. No agency can force a gun company to recall defective products. Gun owners rely entirely on manufacturers to voluntarily fix dangerous flaws.
Why it matters: This isn't about minor cosmetic issues. Defective firearms can fire unexpectedly, fail to fire when needed, or break apart during use. With no federal oversight, dangerous guns stay in circulation until someone gets hurt badly enough to file a lawsuit. Your life may depend on a self-defense firearm working correctly.
"A 40% defect rate would destroy any other industry's reputation and invite immediate federal intervention."
— Gun Industry Accountability AnalysisRecent safety notices reveal how widespread the problem is across major manufacturers. Remington has issued recalls for shotguns, rifles, pistols, and multiple ammunition types—including the Model 700 rifle triggers that took years of lawsuits to address. Sig Sauer has pulled back P320 pistols (adopted by U.S. military) and MCX rifles, with repeated safety concerns on the same product lines. Smith & Wesson recalled M&P shotguns, Shield pistols, and various revolvers. Even Glock—the reliability champion—has issued safety notices for Gen 4 pistols and police department models.
The 40% defect rate exists in an industry marketing products as life-saving tools for self-defense and law enforcement. When a home security system fails, you might get robbed. When a defensive firearm fails, you might die. Some manufacturers have issued multiple recalls for the same product line. The recalls span every defect imaginable: triggers that fire without being pulled, safeties that don't engage, barrels that crack.
The industry's admission of a 40% defect rate suggests the real number might be even higher. Companies only acknowledge problems they can't ignore—usually after injuries pile up or lawsuits threaten profits. Taurus faced a class-action lawsuit over pistols that could fire when dropped or shaken, covering nine different models. Without mandatory safety standards, caveat emptor remains the primary consumer protection.
What this means for you: With no federal safety oversight, the 40% defect rate will likely persist.
- No central database tracks all firearm safety issues
- Gun owners must research recalls themselves
- The Violence Policy Center and other organizations maintain unofficial lists
- Comprehensive tracking remains impossible without regulatory authority
The bottom line: For firearms, a 40% defect rate is just the cost of doing business in an unregulated market where public safety takes a backseat to manufacturer profits.
Go deeper:
Read the original article in The Handbook | By Steve Duskett
Join the Discussion
Have you ever gotten a new gun that had an issue out of the box, and if so, how'd you handle getting it fixed—was it a smooth process with the manufacturer or a headache?
Hello! It looks like you're interested in this conversation, but you don't have an account yet.
Getting fed up of having to scroll through the same posts each visit? When you register for an account, you'll always come back to exactly where you were before, and choose to be notified of new replies (either via email, or push notification). You'll also be able to save bookmarks and upvote posts to show your appreciation to other community members.
With your input, this post could be even better 💗
Register Login