I don't know...
Can you tell me why my high carbon steel ax gets dull when all I use it for is chopping softer wood?
The barrel steel on these pistols is a much softer alloy than ax blade steel.
And work hardened aluminum is much harder than firewood.
Also, it's curious that the damage is on the right hand side, right where the S&W Repair Technician told you it would be.
Like I said, it doesn't look right to me.
I didn't say I know what caused it, only that it justified further investigation.
Maybe the O.P. should send some pictures to the S&W Repair Department and ask them.
Either that or depend on the assumed infallibility of some members of this Forum.
Good luck!
John
Your comments about your steel ax getting dull when chopping wood is bordering on ... silly and disingenuous? ... but you knew that.
Sure. Go ahead. Have the OP send some pics to S&W, and they can likely be forwarded to the Houlton plant, if need be, so the metal (frame) pistol repair folks look at them. They've still got to have some folks left there who produced and repaired the 3rd gen's, since they've only been out of the LE catalog for less than 10 years. (And they're making all those SW1911's there.)
I certainly asked such questions as a younger armorer, both of the head armorer at my agency (longtime S&W armorer), another outside agency armorer who hosted most of the armorer training classes back then, and the various factory LE contact folks, making sure my grasp and understanding of what I was seeing and what they were telling me was correct. BTDT. I thought of myself as a sponge back then, looking to get as much info as possible.
Just because nothing apparent in the OP's pics causes
me any undue concern about
those marks, that doesn't mean I can pretend to know what's happening with the OP's particular gun. Maybe if I could hold it, examine it and inspect it in person I could get a better idea of the condition and functioning of that particular gun, based simply upon my experience and training as a S&W 3rd gen pistol armorer. Maybe. Maybe not. Might find something that would make me want to ask the factory to inspect it further, too. Might not. Dunno. Pics are only pics.
No, I didn't find it 'curious' that the wear pattern on the frame (from the unlocked barrel's impact) would happen to agree with what I was told by the guy at the factory, and I had so reason to doubt his explanation. (He'd been working on the guns since the days of the Auto Improvement Program, and worked closely with the engineers.) He was the same guy who helped walk me through understanding the machining and revisions that were occurring over the years, and which occasionally resulted in me noticing some new things as I was servicing the guns.
Now, since I've already stated numerous times throughout the forum, over time, that I'm neither a factory technician nor a licensed gunsmith, but only a LE agency field armorer, it ought to be quite apparent that I don't consider myself anybody's "expert". Nor have I ever represented myself that way.
Originally, my interest in becoming a factory trained field armorer for some different brands of guns was to enable me to do a couple of things.
First, to enable me to help service, maintain and repair our inventory of duty weapons so I could have confidence in them operating according to factory standards and specs when carried and used in the hands of men and women to whom they were issued. Lives were at stake, right?
Secondly, to be able to service, maintain and repair
my personally-owned guns - and those of other guys and gals who might bring their personally-owned off-duty/retirement guns to me (since I was authorized to service and repair personal weapons) - both during my career, and into my retirement. I even had some calls from outside agencies, asking for input, recommendations and repairs.
If I'd wanted to be a gunsmith, and hang out my own shingle, I'd have gone through one of the gunsmithing programs. I didn't, and don't, though.
OP, while you can likely find a variety of opinions and experiences among online gun forums, you can always contact S&W and ask to send those pics in an email, asking if they would offer an opinion. If they think it's a problem, and the result of some factory materials or manufacturing defect, they'd be the ones to make a definitive decision.
Everything the rest of us opine is for the purpose of polite conversation, exchanging whatever knowledge, experiences and opinions we may have as fellow gun owners and enthusiasts.
I've found and dressed some burrs on my own guns, and any number of duty weapons, and I have similar marks on the aluminum frames of my own guns, and have seen more similar ones on different vintages of 3rd gen's than I could probably ever remember.
Doesn't mean there may not be something else that might be found in your gun, if it were thoroughly inspected in person, and none of us can pretend to know otherwise without actually having the gun in-hand, on a bench, checking everything.