I had some unexpected time today to try to do the spring change in my 69. I initially tried to do it without taking any parts out (other than the spring), but had trouble trying to get the old spring out, even though I wasn't planning on saving it, and was willing to treat it pretty roughly. I didn't have a curved dental pick ... just a couple of pottery tools that my wife loaned me, that were small straight needles mounted in wooded handles, and I had numerous very small screw drivers. I was afraid that even if I was able to get the new spring in (a BIG if), it might well get damaged in the process. So I decided to remove the hammer, rebound slide, and trigger, using several YouTube videos as guidance. I didn't have any problems, but I took it very slow. The hardest part, by far, was replacing the spring in the cylinder stop ... it was much harder for me than for the guys in the videos ... maybe because my spring is stiffer and harder to manage. But I DID finally get it in, and it appeared to work OK. And the reassembly of the other parts went fine. Dry firing seems normal in all respects. I may be able to test fire it with the Underwood 240gr ammo Friday, or perhaps Monday or Tuesday, and see if the problem is gone or not. I SURE hope it's gone.
I was surprised that there were several things about my gun that were different from the older S&W revolvers in the videos I used (they all had the hammers with the attached firing pin). For example, the little safety part that slides in a vertical channel in the frame underneath the rebound slide (I don't remember what it does ... maybe interacts with the cylinder release mechanism somehow(?)) isn't there at all. And the underside of the side plate is quite different ... the narrow long slot that the hammer safety fits into is no longer there.