I think by the second [COLOR=
"Red"]lemon[/COLOR] I would have stopped buying said products.
"Fool me once shame on you, fool me twice shame on me" I've o
wned far more firearms than I can truthfully count at this point
and had exactly one, a Rossi revolver my dad gave me, that
was a lemon. I think if I was having 90% failure rate with my
firearms I would find a new hobby or check my operator head
space and timing.
Morning Clark B
By saying lemon you seem to be comparing to
non repairable automobiles.
Would you quit buying cars just because you needed
to take it back for warranty repair?
Same with S&W guns-- A lemon refers to a non-repairable
-- all my sent-in S&W revolvers were repairable
(some took more than one send-in though)
The "not buying" only works IF a person can find what
they want in another brand of gun & that brand is better.
Same with buying older S&W's, --that ONLY works if S&W
made what you want in an older version.
I looked at 8 brand new S&W model 69's before finding
one that looked to be fitted close to correctly & without
major machine marks. Trigger pull on the one I bought
was horrendous & cylinder was very tight on the recoil
shield (could barely spin it) but cyl to barrel gap was decent
& barrel shroud was fairly well aligned. Hammer had .011"
side play & trigger was just about as loose on lateral play.
Cyl carry up was awful but all but one early
(that makes it an easy repair).
It was actually the worst trigger pull & worst carry up
on all the 69's that I looked at but (those are repairable).
But barrel shroud alignment & cyl lock up position
was good (those are harder to repair).
I bought that 69 & sent it back to Smith for carry up
warranty work. It came back with 4 positions OK & the
5th not right so back it went again. This time it came
back timed correctly so I shimmed the hammer, shimmed
the trigger, shimmed the crane & did a trigger job.
(very smooth action now)