There was a different story 2 years ago on CNBC, which was a followup to a story they did 4 years before (2010). ***
I think the CBS followup is due to the apparent down-playing of the situation.
Probably unclear language - "There is a minor defect which may be noticed ..." vs "Loaded gun may discharge at any time without using trigger. Checking gun for round may fire unexpectedly. "
It's just interesting to me in comparison to other engineering problems, such as hand-grenade triggers and the GM key-switch. It seems like consistent manufacture and assembly of the parts would be a high priority, as would retrieving and analyzing the affected items, such as Samsung did.
<Off-topic>
Of the key-switch, I have come to believe it was the change to make the mechanism cheaper by eliminating the 'wings' that in earlier versions would be used to provide leverage to the steering unlocking mechanism. By making the keys larger and stronger to take the turning force they also made the key-slot in the head longer, which allows greater leverage to the key ring, allowing the key ring weight to apply torque. I note that the original 'fix' was a key slot insert that limited the movement of the key ring. It isn't clear to me that key (pun) individuals in GM understood that this would allow shutting off the protection systems at critical times, but that exposing the nuisance turn-offs** would mean a costly warranty recall.
Prior to the key-head size change they would not have had related nuisance shut-offs, so there would be no obvious need to test for them.
Short GM version - a string of design decisions that each seemed OK at the time. Remington - ???
**OTOH nuisance turn-offs aren't new with the keys. In my GM car I had the engine drop dead at highway speeds in rush-hour traffic because GM didn't account for corrosion and put dissimilar metals into the grounding path of an ignition module. I'm glad I wasn't killed, but GM never issued a recall.
***the CNBC investigation revealed that even before the gun went on the market, Walker himself had discovered a potential problem with the trigger he designed. In a
1946 memo, he warned of a "theoretical unsafe condition" involving the gun's safety—the mechanism that's supposed to keep the rifle from firing accidentally. From
Walkers analysis results