What Was The Worst New Firearm You've Ever Bought?

ol777gunnerz

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Mine was a Remington model 522 Viper 22LR when they came out in 1993, straight out of the box the sights were off by over 5 ft shooting at a target 20 ft away. It never was quite right, I got rid of it a short time later. A recent one sold at national auction site for $85. I have 2 bricks of Viper 22LR, each brick is now worth more than the rifles. First pic is the rifle in the auction.
 

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H&R junk

Bought a H&R 929, 9 shot 22 revolver. It was out of time and spit lead each time. Traded it and bought a Ruger Super Single Six Convertible instead!
 
Bren 10 by Dornaus and Dixon. The push on/off firing pin safety took two hands to operate. They originally sold the guns with a maximum of 1 magazine. I had to personally visit their manufacturing facility in Southern California to get all the magazines that I had ordered. The worst part was the manual, half of which was in red type warning of the dangers of shooting the gun. The only conclusion you could reach after reading it was you should never, ever consider firing the weapon.

Keith
 
A Ruger SR45. Three trips back to the factory, no joy. The only Ruger I could ever say anything bad about.
 
Taurus 651. Had it repaired under warranty after a painful Taurus customer service experience. Sold it and never looked back at the brand.
 
Colt Python 38 target match revolver. Barrel was cross threaded, rear sight full right, point of impact was left edge of paper at 50 feet. Returned to Colt with target and letter of explanation, received reply: "Revolver within Specifications". Returned to warranty repair station in Minnesota after a conversation with pistolsmith. Barrel removed and re-installed, 357 magnum cylinder fitted to the frame, traded in on new rifle.

One Python was one too many.
 
Well I have had a pretty good, large collection of firearms over many years but two things stand out. First is that I have always been a HUGE fan of used guns and not such a tremendous fan of purchasing new. And secondly... I suppose I have had pretty good luck in the new guns that I have bought.

To be 100% honest, the worst NEW gun I have ever purchased... ummm, I don't think anyone would expect it to be very good. It is a Jennings J-22 pistol. I had shot one that a friend owned way back when I was in high school... so later when I was old enough to purchase and a local gun store was advertising them, I couldn't possibly go wrong at $54.95 plus tax, could I?!

Well... really, no. Considering that price (early 1990's), the pistol is a good lookin' little thing and if you find some ammo it likes... it kind of runs some of the time. Heh. And like most miniature little blowblack pot-metal cheapsters... the barrel is fixed to the frame, so when it does run, it's far more accurate then you are expecting.

Now then, you want a real experience of a brand new, not low in cost, well known gun that was a total disappointment? My buddy bought a brand new Sig Sauer 1911 Match Elite Duo-tone. About 4 or 5 years ago, this was a very good looking adjustable sight "target" pistol that ran somewhere between $1,000-$1,100 but this gun was an absolute problem child.

1) rear Bo-mar style adjustable sight was loose and rattling in the dovetail... it shifted side to side. Didn't fall out of the pistol, but may as well have

2) deep horizontal gouges in the right side of the slide near the muzzle of the pistol... they almost looked like scarring from holster wear except they were UNDER the finish of the pistol. Manufacturing defect, plain and simple.

3) the pistol had an irrationally short chamber and ammo that fed, fired and fully (and accurately) functioned in multiple Ed Brown, Dan Wesson, Les Baer, Smith & Wesson, Ruger, Remington, STI, and Springfield 1911 pistols would NOT chamber in this Sig pistol. Shortening the COAL of the load was the only way to make the pistol run. 230gr Hardball worked, but a bullet of any other shape was not a feeding issue, it was a chambering issue. I never had the tools to measure the chamber... but when I could successfully run the SAME ammo in two dozen other 1911 pistols, I simply concluded that this Sig was out of spec.

It was a very beautiful looking pistol and the front strap checkering was a nice feature. With Hardball, it was an accurate gun as well, but what a damn lemon and it certainly turned me off of Sig pistols, especially their 1911 pistols.
 
A tie between a Tec-9, which would only hit a target after firing at it 20 times so that the law of averages took over, and a Kel-Tec KSG which kicked like a mule with steel shoes, beat my arm up with ejected rounds and dug a hole in my shoulder with a very badly designed butt plate (angled, skinny and solid steel).

Runner up would be an H&R single shot, break down 12 ga. which didn't have nearly enough weight to deal with anything but bird shot.

Most of the guns I've bought have been good including a Raven P-25 that was amazingly accurate until I took it apart to clean it. After that it shot like all other Ravens - badly.
 
Colt king Cobra in Ultimate stainless, brand new in 1989.Cylinder did not lock up on two charge holes.
 
Years ago - was stationed down at Roswell.
Got into Jackrabbit shooting with some guys.
Didn't have a gun so started with borrowed firearms.
Pretty soon heard, buy a gun!
Went into a local Pawn Shop - Gun Store and bought a pot metal imported single action 22 Revolver.
Didn't take long to figure out that was a big mistake!
Traded that poc is for a Ruger Single Six.
 
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Ruger p85 - it would fire when de-cocked.....I got rid of it and later learned that there was a recall as the firing pin broke into two pieces and the safety/de-cocker would cause the forward part of the pin to strike the primer.

2nd runner up - S&W 4006.....never shot the same place twice.....I couldn't hit the side of a barn from inside! I traded it off for something else.
 
Browning Buckmark .22 rifle.

My 2 boys got Garands, but my little girl didn't want one. We went gun shopping and she picked out a Browning Buckmark rifle. I've had good luck with Brownings, and had no reason to suspect otherwise with this one.

(Not my photo)
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She shot it and started crying. The thing spit lead and powder like crazy. I couldn't shoot it either.

I sent it back to Browning. They sent it back, saying it was fixed. I shot it and it did the same thing. The store took it back and I got her a nice 10/22, but she had lost whatever interest she had in shooting by then. She is a young married lady now, and the 10/22 sits forgotten in my safe.
 
I once bought a Helwan 9mm pistol made in Egypt . This was the only single action automatic pistol I've ever owned. That right - single action! Upon inserting a magazine racking the slide and firing the hammer would drop to the down position. You had to re-cock the hammer each time you fired it. I decided it was worth the price of fixing so I just sold it off.
Jim
 
Grendel P10.

I bought one right when they came out, and it didn't work. Took it back and the store gave me another. Same story. Went through five of them, then just got my money back. George Kellgren eventually got guns that worked on the market, but I learned not to be the beta-tester. :)
 
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