Again.,.... amazes me to see some take one gun, out of thousands, and run with it... one gun...
I did the same thing. I was looking for some small defect or maybe missing lettering. However, this gun was fired. All S&W pistols are fired at least once to include the casing.When I first saw the photos. I knew something was wrong with the rear of the gun, I just could not pick up on it. Then someone said no rear serrations. I was like, "That's it!"
Maybe QC saw the gun, and like me they knew there was something off, but they just did not pick up on it.. I don't know..
Normally I'd agree with you, but this is not just some easily missed blemish. The gun had to be handled by several people and ALL of them missed this. I'm not bashing the company, but this is an example of several people dropping the ball.Again.,.... amazes me to see some take one gun, out of thousands, and run with it... one gun...
Normally I'd agree with you, but this is not just some easily missed blemish. The gun had to be handled by several people and ALL of them missed this. I'm not bashing the company, but this is an example of several people dropping the ball.
This is probably true. When I see stuff like this my process improvement training kicks in and I ask the question, "How can this process be altered so this is impossible?"...it was just plain missed due to pressure.
So, it missed the step where the CNC cutter put in the short section of scalloped slide serrations. Probably not the only one that came through that shift, on that machine. Maybe. Returning the gun would let them ID the shift/cutter/machine operator.
I could see handling hundreds of these every day, with shifts running 24/7, and not catching that short section of light scalloping missing on the back of the slide.
The production cell guy/gal who assembled the slide, or the whole gun, probably didn't feel any difference, especially if he/she was wearing gloves.
The guy doing the test-fire probably didn't feel any difference when briefly running the short slide to load & shoot the gun. One among many, many guns being handled and fired that shift. Think racks and crates.
This is the kind of stuff that S&W collectors used to hold their breath and hope happened. Now it's the end of the world for some folks.
Now, if it were a mechanical feature which interfered with the gun actually operating & functioning? That's something that ought to be more likely to be caught during bench checks & test-fire.
Things can still happen, though.