Fastbolt
Member
If someone were to look a bit deeper, the company listed the unregistered trademark CSX name in the Annual Report ending April 2021, hidden within the long list of trademarks several pages into the report, and they applied for the trademark in Dec 2020.
The lines of the frame look like pretty clean aluminum manufacture. The idea of a small Single Action pistol, with ambi slide stop and thumb safeties, will may find a lot of enthusiastic buyers. Adding replaceable back/palm straps to a metal frame would be icing on the cake for some folks.
Of course, carrying a cocked & locked pistol means some attention to safety and additional manipulation, but the same can be said for 1911's, M&P's with the manual safety option and a number of other makes/models.
I have no information about this new model, as I stopped attending armorer classes in the last few years (my former agency just went from M&P's to the 3.9" SIG P320 w/factory RDS, so I rather doubt S&W will be sending anyone there to teach S&W classes in the near future
).
It's always been my understanding that S&W corporate conducts and takes market focus results very seriously, even if they don't produce the results that some aficionados might wish.
Nice to see them put some attention back on metal-framed guns. The design looks like it was made to directly appeal to a segment of the private owner market, and not specifically for LE/Gov. I could see it become a popular off-duty or secondary choice for the cops who have the training and knowledge of running a cocked and locked SA weapon, though, using an appropriate holster.
Hope it works out well for them.
The lines of the frame look like pretty clean aluminum manufacture. The idea of a small Single Action pistol, with ambi slide stop and thumb safeties, will may find a lot of enthusiastic buyers. Adding replaceable back/palm straps to a metal frame would be icing on the cake for some folks.
Of course, carrying a cocked & locked pistol means some attention to safety and additional manipulation, but the same can be said for 1911's, M&P's with the manual safety option and a number of other makes/models.
I have no information about this new model, as I stopped attending armorer classes in the last few years (my former agency just went from M&P's to the 3.9" SIG P320 w/factory RDS, so I rather doubt S&W will be sending anyone there to teach S&W classes in the near future

It's always been my understanding that S&W corporate conducts and takes market focus results very seriously, even if they don't produce the results that some aficionados might wish.

Nice to see them put some attention back on metal-framed guns. The design looks like it was made to directly appeal to a segment of the private owner market, and not specifically for LE/Gov. I could see it become a popular off-duty or secondary choice for the cops who have the training and knowledge of running a cocked and locked SA weapon, though, using an appropriate holster.
Hope it works out well for them.

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