M&P 15-22 Broke After 6 Rounds

I will bet S&W is kicking themselves for not test firing more than one round in these guns! For a 5 minute fix they have to pay shipping both ways...... Well , they are making money hand over fist right now, so I guess it doesnt bother them... lol.
But think of all the money they could be making if all these lemons didnt need to be shipped back!
Seems like most gun manufacturers are taking this route anymore.... Sad, but I guess you have to keep up with demand, at this point in time.
I hope the same BS isnt going on the ammo manufacting plants..........That would be scary!
 
Had mine out for 50 rounds, big bang and parts fell out it. Thats quality for ya. It will be gone for who know how long.
 
I hate to hear some are having problems. I actually talked my wife into allowing me to test mine today (its a Christmas present). I put 400 rounds through it with six minor jams, FTE, FTLs.

I have bought several guns from Academy and they are always up front with me regarding their return policy with guns. They will not exchange or repair guns. They will return them to the company for you. Good Policy? Bad Policy? To me it really doesn’t matter, they let me know up front before I purchased. That’s all I can expect.
 
I'm sure S&W wrings out a design before bringing it to market. But once in production if the quality control isn't perfect then some bad ones get through. At least they have decent customer service and usually rectify any problem in a timely fashion. I bought a Colt/Umarex weeks before the M&P 15-22 came out, an okay rifle but poorly designed. When the M&P became available I bought one and just sold my Colt. The M&P is a much superior design and mine has been troublefree. My 1'st outing I actually tried to get it to jam by mixmatching various brands of ammo, and could not. I feel confident that down the road should a problem occur, S&W will fix it promptly, hopefully that problem will never occur. This has been one of the most fun 22s I've ever owned.
 
I picked mine up Wednesday. Put 100+ rounds through today and so far flawless. I hate it for the one's having trouble-I've been there before with a new gun. Anyway, found the forum looking for advice for a scope and wanted to say hello.
 
I fired mine for the first time today. It shoots pretty well though I had about five jams. The problem I am having is, it shoots low. I raised the sights as far as it will go and it still shoots low. The grouping is good. I shot 100 rounds.
 
I bought a 15-22 at Gander Mountain about a month ago. The gunsmith wanted to shoot it while I was filling out paperwork. He did shoot it, one cartridge at a time between jams. They tried different ammo. Still was a single shot. Tried a different magazine from the only other 15-22 that they had. Still jammed. They offered to send it back to S&W for me (I still had not left the store, but I had paid for it). Thankfully, the manager came over and refunded my money. I bought mine based off of the nearly 100% positive reviews that I read on this site. Maybe I just got a lemon. I also have a Ruger Charger 10-22 with about 10 of the 25 round mags, and it has been totally flawless thru about 5,000 rounds. I have three sons that I take shooting with me all the time. They love shooting the Ruger. I really was buying the 15-22 for them to shoot. I think I would buy another Ruger Charger before I risk my money again on another 15-22. Not bashing S&W because I have about 25 different semi-auto pistols and revolvers. Never a minutes trouble out of any of them.

While we were shooting the other day, all three boys wanted to shoot one of the S&W .357s. They took turns shooting it with some .38 special loads. My youngest is 8 years old and weighs about 48 pounds (tiny guy but he will whip the 10 and 12 year old when they mess with him). I had been shooting a Model 629 with full house .44 mag loads. He got pretty mad at me for not letting him shoot that gun. He thinks he is 6'4" and about 260 lbs. I am trying to find a S&W 460 XVR. My youngest will probably want to shoot it as well.
 
I think Smith and Wesson just produced a few lemons. I bought my 15-22 because a friend of mine had one and I loved his. His dad had one also, and neither one of them had any problems with them. I bought mine about a month ago and I have put 800+ rounds through it and it has jammed twice. I absolutely love my gun.
 
I think Smith and Wesson just produced a few lemons. I bought my 15-22 because a friend of mine had one and I loved his. His dad had one also, and neither one of them had any problems with them. I bought mine about a month ago and I have put 800+ rounds through it and it has jammed twice. I absolutely love my gun.

Thats great to hear!!!, Love my 15-22 aswell,and i agree, i dont think there all lemons, just some here and there, theres a members brotherinlaw that has over 5300rds through his 15-22 without issue.
 
I fired mine for the first time today. It shoots pretty well though I had about five jams. The problem I am having is, it shoots low. I raised the sights as far as it will go and it still shoots low. The grouping is good. I shot 100 rounds.
Don't raise the front sight, lower it. And put the rear down a few clicks so you have some adjustment available there. The top should be approximately even with the sight base top.
After reading this and other threads here and other forums, this sounds like a product rushed to market and the resulting teething problems. S&W is apparently able to easily fix the trouble, and sounds like the magazine glitches smooth out with use. I expect some of this on a first model of most anything, usually cars and electronics. I usually buy the second or third one hoping most everything is fixed by that point, but I was so taken with the 15-22 I bought the first one I saw on the shelf, at my favorite local gunshop. So far, I've had only 2 failures to feed with Federal Champions out of 2 different magazines, otherwise zero issues in 175 rounds out of 7 mags with the Federals, MiniMags and Blazers. Hopefully my luck will hold.
 
yeah, i just happened to see the 15-22 in a magazine, went to Academy, just to look really, and get there price, wasnt planning to buy. They let me hold it, and i had to have it!!!! 4 days later, back to s&w it went. But ive had it back for awhile now, got bout 400rds or so, i lost count..but its been loads of fun, and worth the wait to get it back from S&W.
 
Second Verse, Same as First

So after two weeks at the factory, I received my 15-22 back from S&W on Tuesday (with an extra mag). If you recall, the first time out it sheared the feed ramp off after 6 rounds.

Well, I took it to the range today with just about every .22 brand made (except Remington, since everything I've read says it doesn't like it). And so the moment of truth arrived. First clip, 2 FTF's. Second clip, 1 FTF, etc. Pretty much every clip had at least one failure to either fire or feed. This included, Federal, CCI and Winchester. And it was out of four different mags.

Then it really got interesting. Mags of Federal, and Winchester would not fire after the initial round. Second round feed properly, but would not fire. Mags of CCI were fine. Mix the Federal and Winchester in with CCI and they were fine. Fire an entire mag of CCI and you could fire an entire mag of Fed. or Rem. But after that, it was back to failure to fire for the Federal or Remington.

The last straw was an out of battery round (Federal I think). I guess it's back to S&W yet again! Man I wish I had never bought this gun!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
I'm really sorry to hear some of you guys having so many problems, especially with some of us having few or none. I wonder if there is anything involving the barrel not being aligned vertically being a factor in this, like slightly canted to one side? Anyone having trouble see anything like that? I think this would mainly effect feeding (misaligned feed ramp). Speaking of that, is the feed ramp glued on or welded or what?
 
So after two weeks at the factory, I received my 15-22 back from S&W on Tuesday (with an extra mag). If you recall, the first time out it sheared the feed ramp off after 6 rounds.

Well, I took it to the range today with just about every .22 brand made (except Remington, since everything I've read says it doesn't like it). And so the moment of truth arrived. First clip, 2 FTF's. Second clip, 1 FTF, etc. Pretty much every clip had at least one failure to either fire or feed. This included, Federal, CCI and Winchester. And it was out of four different mags.

Then it really got interesting. Mags of Federal, and Winchester would not fire after the initial round. Second round feed properly, but would not fire. Mags of CCI were fine. Mix the Federal and Winchester in with CCI and they were fine. Fire an entire mag of CCI and you could fire an entire mag of Fed. or Rem. But after that, it was back to failure to fire for the Federal or Remington.

The last straw was an out of battery round (Federal I think). I guess it's back to S&W yet again! Man I wish I had never bought this gun!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Sorry to hear about your issues. I have known your frustration.

I am a little confused about the ammo you used. You said at first you didn't bring any Remington, then in a later paragraph you stated that you had failure to fire on both Federal and Remington.

I understand you expect the rifle to feed and fire any and all types of ammo. But in reality, .22s are known to like some types of ammo over others. If you read the posts over on ar15.com, you will find owners of .22s with conversion kits for their ARs and also owners of dedicated .22 uppers that have ammo problems. These are guns that cost as much as twice the price of the 15-22.

Since I got my gun back from S&W, it has fed and fired 300 rounds of Federal bulk with no issues. Since the gun likes that ammo, I will continue to use it. I know that other brands could possibly cause me problems. Yeah, I will no doubt tempt fate and try other brands, but will not be surprised if the rifle has some problems. We are dealing with ammo that costs less than .01 a piece to manufacture in some brands here. Quality control is difficult to maintain at 100% with high speed production.

.22s also are known to create a lot of dirt and gunk buildup, especially if you shoot your gun with a lot of lubrication. Dirt in the feeding area or magazines can cause problems.

Did your failure to fire incidents show a hard hit on the cartridge? If so it could be bad ammo. Or dirt in the firing pin area.

Did the out of battery incident break something? Out of battery is not uncommon in the .22 semi autos. I wear shooting glasses at the range as a precaution.
 
My bad for saying Remington later in the post. The brands I tried were the CCI MiniMags, Federal bulk and Winchester (both Wildcat and XPertHV).

And while I'm happy that you tried Federal and had 300 rounds fire perfectly, I fired 300 rounds and had over 30 malfunctions! I loaded full clips of each brand and ALL had malfunctions! Later, when neither Federal or Winchester would fire, the CCI's started to work better.

I realize .22s are not perfect and I'm willing to accept that. I do not expect every round to fire flawlessley. But I do expect that when I pay $500 for a gun, ANY gun, it will not have a 10-15% failure rate.

As for the out of battery incident, that was just the not-so-perfect end to the not-so-perfect day. I've shot .22s for a number of years and this was my first instance of this type. I'm glad that my 9-year-old daughter didn't have it happen to her (she's not keen on debris hitting her in the face). She would quit shooting!

At this point I just don't have confidence in the gun and that's why Academy is shipping it back Monday for the second time!
 
+1 on what Beck said.

.22lr ammo performance is all over the map. The ability of .22lr firearm actions to reliably function are typically limited to a select few. Even the flagship of .22lr pistols, S&W Model 41, chokes on more varieties of ammo than it reliably functions with (my personal experience only).

One area that may be causing problems is free movement of the bolt. The Colt/Umarex has a bolt speed adjustment (spring tension) to help compensate for variations in ammo performance. The S&W does not. All we can do is make sure the bolt assembly operates smoothly. My bolt assembly felt like is was riding on sandpaper rails when I squeezed it by hand. I sprayed it abundantley with cleaner and then applied very little Rem Oil with Teflon. As well, the tube needs to be free of debris. Mine was filthy after just a couple hundred rounds at the range. After wiping out the tube with a rag wraped around my finger (no lubricant afterwards), and a clean and very lightly lubricated bolt assembly, it was definitley smoother when pulling back the charging handle. There was a noticibly louder WHACK when letting the charging handle rip (my sonic scientific methodolgy to determine correct bolt speed and funcion).

In any event, I hope you can get things worked out to enjoy your rifle without having to send it back to S&W again.
 
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