No doubts to this. S&W makes hundreds of thousands of guns each year. They are the #1 manufacturer by volume. For 2010 S&W produced just under half a million handguns according to BATFE records. That does not include rifles, shotguns, handcuffs, accessories, magazines, etc.
Today's S&W revolvers are quality products. Still amongst the best that can be purchased anywhere. They are accurate and reliable. They have features and strength that we could not even dream of a few short decades ago.
Is there a lemon now and then.....Of course there is. It does not matter what you pay for something, it is not possible for any company to produce 100% perfect products 100% of the time.
No they are not the way they used to be. Well neither are french fries or popcorn at the moves. Nothing is the way it used to be.
Someone is going to get that lemon and the first thing they are going to do is come here and let everyone know how S&W is going to the dogs because a $1000 revolver should not be bad from the factory.
That is the line you hear. OK is it acceptable for an $847 gun to have a failure? How about a $516 gun? What is price that it is OK for the company to not be 100% perfect?
For the buyer it does not matter, he wants a good gun. I don't blame him, so do I.
There are going to be bad ones and that is why there are warranties. Buy with confidence. Most folks never have problems.
Excellent post, it reflects my attitudes.
I've had 5 Model 500s, won't go into why but I now only have two which are keepers. All have had uniformly excellent triggers, zero or next to zero end shake. All have been very accurate, none have had finish problems. My PC model had no issues that I was aware of other than that the "Performance Center" marking on the barrel didn't match the other markings. S&W paid to send it back, fixed the marking and replaced the barrel for reasons I never learned as I didn't think anything was wrong with it.
Handled a 686 in a Sports Authority a while back, as good a trigger as I could ever expect.
All the "they don't make them like they used to" are entitled to their opinions but the old stuff wasn't made of materials as strong as today's guns and that comes straight from S&W engineers, not internet hype. Choose what to believe but I'll believe S&W long before all the internet experts.
Older is better? If so, why did S&W have to rework the 29s so they wouldn't shoot loose? You don't buy a 29 if you want to load the really big stuff or you get a Model 500 or 460, they CAN take it.
MIM parts??? If done well and I'm sure S&W's are, are just as good as forged. ILS??? I don't use it, would prefer to do without it but it hasn't caused any issues.
S&W's only real competition is Ruger. Both of my Ruger revolvers are excellent guns. Want to pay $4K for a Korth and have nothing north of a .357, go right ahead.
If S&W's QA and product engineering were so shoddy, they wouldn't be the dominant revolver manufacturer in the world, someone would have run them out of business but that hasn't happened. Don