Dave270
Member
On Feb. 24th., I posted that I had to send my Shield 9mm back to S&W for what Customer Service said was a "dead trigger".
On Monday, I received a phone call and an e-mail from S&W saying that my Shield was repaired and was sent out Monday. S&W said that they had replaced the trigger bar, checked everything else and had test fired my Shield.. Then the technican asked me if I had ever taken the Shield apart by locking the slide back, moving the take-down lever to the down position and then, instead of moving the sear deactivation lever down, and just pulled the trigger and removed the slide.. I told him that I had done that once or twice, because I read about it on this forum, and he said that doing that and not following the manual is probably what damaged my trigger bar. He said that they had received several Shields with the same problem as mine, and that in each case, the Shield had been disassembled using the trigger instead of the sear deactivation lever.. He said that sooner or later, using the trigger method would cause trigger bar problems.
I know a lot of you on this forum have said that was the way you disassembled your Shields, so I thought that a heads-up was in order.. But from now on I am going to follow the manual and use the sear deactivation lever whenever I disassemble my Shield..
This is not a criticism of anyone or the method you use, just what S&W told me...
Dave
On Monday, I received a phone call and an e-mail from S&W saying that my Shield was repaired and was sent out Monday. S&W said that they had replaced the trigger bar, checked everything else and had test fired my Shield.. Then the technican asked me if I had ever taken the Shield apart by locking the slide back, moving the take-down lever to the down position and then, instead of moving the sear deactivation lever down, and just pulled the trigger and removed the slide.. I told him that I had done that once or twice, because I read about it on this forum, and he said that doing that and not following the manual is probably what damaged my trigger bar. He said that they had received several Shields with the same problem as mine, and that in each case, the Shield had been disassembled using the trigger instead of the sear deactivation lever.. He said that sooner or later, using the trigger method would cause trigger bar problems.
I know a lot of you on this forum have said that was the way you disassembled your Shields, so I thought that a heads-up was in order.. But from now on I am going to follow the manual and use the sear deactivation lever whenever I disassemble my Shield..
This is not a criticism of anyone or the method you use, just what S&W told me...
Dave