Bought Another Bodyguard 2.0

Cheyenne WYO

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I have been so impressed with the Bodyguard 2.0 that I bought another one. The box has a February 2025 date. Oddly, the serial number appears lower than the one I bought last year. The slide is stamped Maryville, TN and the frame says Springfield, MA. The ramp that is integral with the frame does not have the ridge that my first BG 2.0 has. The sights appear to be centered. I was able to load the 10 round magazine 4 times without the need of a loading tool. I was able to load the 12 round magazine one time without needing a tool. I only could load 11 rounds in that magazine two more times I tried. One time the 12th round made a crease in the top round in the magazine before I gave up.

I went from the store to the range. I checked to be sure there was no barrel obstruction and then loaded up and shot. I fired 10 rounds of Winchester White Box out of a 10 round magazine and 64 jacketed round nose handloads total out of 10 and 12 round magazines. There were no failures to fire, but I had 2 instances where the slide did not lock back after firing all 10 rounds from the flat base magazine. The latch seems stiffer on the new one and/or required the slide to go farther back before latching. This is probably a minor break-in issue.

As most of you know, I did not like the stock sights, so I put XS R3D 2.0 sights on my first BG 2.0. The rear notch of the stock sight is just too wide, and the sights are not high profile enough for my tastes. I did better than before with the stock sights on the new gun, but I still will order XS sights for this gun.

The biggest difference was the trigger pull. My first gun has around 2000 rounds through it, and the trigger pull is very consistent between 4 and 4-1/8 pounds. This new gun has a stiff trigger pull and ranged between 4-5/8 pounds (once) to 5-1/2 pounds, mostly above 5 pounds. This affected my accuracy because I was expecting shots to go off before they did, and my misses were to the left. I probably managed to do better at 15 yards than I did when I first got my first BG 2.0, but it still did not meet my requirements.

My suggestions to anyone who wants to improve their speed and accuracy are to dry fire the gun a lot and to install the XS sights. For people who don't want to buy new sights, at least make your triggers smooth and approximately one pound lighter, which should affect accuracy.
 
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Posts complaining about the several items that were often complained about have really slowed down over the past few weeks.

As well they should.....S&W QC best get their heads out of that place the sun don't shine and fix these problems before they ship out.

They did that with the CSX e-series so it could be the new Bodyguard was not well manufactured due to the move to TN...
 
.... it could be the new Bodyguard was not well manufactured due to the move to TN...

There is ZERO excuse for a legendary firearm manufacturer like S&W to release a new defense handgun with the list of issues that have been posted from owners.

At the range today I got my very first finger bite from any firearm I've shot since 1977. It was my little BG2, and it took a little chunk of meat out of the inside edge of my trigger finger. :mad:

I won't be shooting a handgun that becomes carnivorous and bites the finger that feeds it! :(
 
I understand that you were impressed with the first one. Pray tell what you will do with the first now that you have a second?

I like the gun I am carrying to be clean and showing no signs of having been recently fired for evidentiary reasons. But, I shoot the BG 2.0 a lot and don't really like to clean it every time I go to the range. So, this gives me some optionality to pick up a clean one and get to the other one later, or to pick up the dirty one, bring it to the range, and clean it after a few hundred rounds. Also, I may want to put one in an alternate location. I am not one who has one for carry and one for the range.
 
At the range today I got my very first finger bite from any firearm I've shot since 1977. It was my little BG2, and it took a little chunk of meat out of the inside edge of my trigger finger. :mad:
(

I find that the trigger does not bite if I am using the pad of my finger on the trigger. If I get some bite (which is rare), it is a reminder that my finger is in the wrong place (usually the first joint, which throws shots left for me), and I have been able to correct my positioning during a string of fire with the feedback. The grip on the gun is so small that more of the hand goes around the grip but you have to keep your trigger finger from doing that with the trigger. Every person may be different in this regard, so try a few different things to see if one way of pressing the trigger is better than others.
 
I find that the trigger does not bite if I am using the pad of my finger on the trigger. If I get some bite (which is rare), it is a reminder that my finger is in the wrong place (usually the first joint, which throws shots left for me), and I have been able to correct my positioning during a string of fire with the feedback. The grip on the gun is so small that more of the hand goes around the grip but you have to keep your trigger finger from doing that with the trigger. Every person may be different in this regard, so try a few different things to see if one way of pressing the trigger is better than others.

That is an excellent observation. :D

Yes... I think you are right about the pad vs the first joint. I was focused on sight alignment and may be placing my trigger finger too far into the trigger guard. I wear size large glove but don't have big hands, but I have long fingers. I will focus on my trigger finger next range day.
 
I do the carry one/shoot the other school of carry gun ownership....I have a pair of P365s, and G42s as well.
Do shoot the carry gun, especially with carry ammo. Lots of good reasons to have a spare; breakdown, theft, or, God forbid, police custody.
Don't feel the need to do this with target and range guns, but a backup carry gun makes sense to me.
Happy to hear the new magazines load more easily.
QUESTION FOR CHEYENNE, WY...will the new, 10 round magazine lock in to the magwell against a closed slide? Without excess force? Thanks.

Moon
 
No. No. I don't top off with this gun or micro nines like the Sig P365.

I should clarify my earlier post. I can manage to slam a full 10 round magazine in the gun to top off after chambering a round. But, it is not without an inordinate amount of effort. I do not trust the reliability of that setup, even though the gun has functioned the few times I have tried it.
 
No. No. I don't top off with this gun or micro nines like the Sig P365.

My policy as well, though the spare mag for the P365 is carried with 10.
Because of the difficulty of seating the BG2.0 mag, against a closed slide, only carry 9 in that spare.
I have some mags that will seat with 10, but it's not consistent.
To be clear, I never top off either pistol. Those mags are packed pretty damned tight.
Moon
 
Also planning on a second 2.0. Different color this time though. I replaced the sights with the XS and they are night and day, still no failures of any kind with the gun, it’s definitely my favorite. Of the owners I’ve talked to, they all have the same opinion about its reliability.
 
I have been so impressed with the Bodyguard 2.0 that I bought another one. The box has a February 2025 date. Oddly, the serial number appears lower than the one I bought last year. The slide is stamped Maryville, TN and the frame says Springfield, MA. The ramp that is integral with the frame does not have the ridge that my first BG 2.0 has. The sights appear to be centered. I was able to load the 10 round magazine 4 times without the need of a loading tool. I was able to load the 12 round magazine one time without needing a tool. I only could load 11 rounds in that magazine two more times I tried. One time the 12th round made a crease in the top round in the magazine before I gave up.

I went from the store to the range. I checked to be sure there was no barrel obstruction and then loaded up and shot. I fired 10 rounds of Winchester White Box out of a 10 round magazine and 64 jacketed round nose handloads total out of 10 and 12 round magazines. There were no failures to fire, but I had 2 instances where the slide did not lock back after firing all 10 rounds from the flat base magazine. The latch seems stiffer on the new one and/or required the slide to go farther back before latching. This is probably a minor break-in issue.

As most of you know, I did not like the stock sights, so I put XS R3D 2.0 sights on my first BG 2.0. The rear notch of the stock sight is just too wide, and the sights are not high profile enough for my tastes. I did better than before with the stock sights on the new gun, but I still will order XS sights for this gun.

The biggest difference was the trigger pull. My first gun has around 2000 rounds through it, and the trigger pull is very consistent between 4 and 4-1/8 pounds. This new gun has a stiff trigger pull and ranged between 4-5/8 pounds (once) to 5-1/2 pounds, mostly above 5 pounds. This affected my accuracy because I was expecting shots to go off before they did, and my misses were to the left. I probably managed to do better at 15 yards than I did when I first got my first BG 2.0, but it still did not meet my requirements.

My suggestions to anyone who wants to improve their speed and accuracy are to dry fire the gun a lot and to install the XS sights. For people who don't want to buy new sights, at least make your triggers smooth and approximately one pound lighter, which should affect accuracy.
I guess I'm lucky I got one the first day of availibility, and it came with a great trigger pull of 4lbs, but after a thousand rounds, worked itself down to 3.5lbs. I installed the new sights and buffed the ramp off and the gun is not only 100% dependable, but is extremely accurate, hitting an 8" gong at 25 yards all day long.
 
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I should clarify my earlier post. I can manage to slam a full 10 round magazine in the gun to top off after chambering a round. But, it is not without an inordinate amount of effort. I do not trust the reliability of that setup, even though the gun has functioned the few times I have tried it.
I can do it as well and I test that at the range and never had a failure.

I don’t do the +1 routine but carry a full spare mag.
 
I have been so impressed with the Bodyguard 2.0 that I bought another one. The box has a February 2025 date. Oddly, the serial number appears lower than the one I bought last year. The slide is stamped Maryville, TN and the frame says Springfield, MA. The ramp that is integral with the frame does not have the ridge that my first BG 2.0 has. The sights appear to be centered. I was able to load the 10 round magazine 4 times without the need of a loading tool. I was able to load the 12 round magazine one time without needing a tool. I only could load 11 rounds in that magazine two more times I tried. One time the 12th round made a crease in the top round in the magazine before I gave up.

I went from the store to the range. I checked to be sure there was no barrel obstruction and then loaded up and shot. I fired 10 rounds of Winchester White Box out of a 10 round magazine and 64 jacketed round nose handloads total out of 10 and 12 round magazines. There were no failures to fire, but I had 2 instances where the slide did not lock back after firing all 10 rounds from the flat base magazine. The latch seems stiffer on the new one and/or required the slide to go farther back before latching. This is probably a minor break-in issue.

As most of you know, I did not like the stock sights, so I put XS R3D 2.0 sights on my first BG 2.0. The rear notch of the stock sight is just too wide, and the sights are not high profile enough for my tastes. I did better than before with the stock sights on the new gun, but I still will order XS sights for this gun.

The biggest difference was the trigger pull. My first gun has around 2000 rounds through it, and the trigger pull is very consistent between 4 and 4-1/8 pounds. This new gun has a stiff trigger pull and ranged between 4-5/8 pounds (once) to 5-1/2 pounds, mostly above 5 pounds. This affected my accuracy because I was expecting shots to go off before they did, and my misses were to the left. I probably managed to do better at 15 yards than I did when I first got my first BG 2.0, but it still did not meet my requirements.

My suggestions to anyone who wants to improve their speed and accuracy are to dry fire the gun a lot and to install the XS sights. For people who don't want to buy new sights, at least make your triggers smooth and approximately one pound lighter, which should affect accuracy.
I can't find anything on my frame as to where it was made. Where exactly would I find this? TIA
 
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