I for one am extremely happy with this thread. My spring was out and a bit shined up. I popped it back in...have since fired off several hundred rounds and no issues. My shield is a keeper...especially since my wife put one dead nuts bullseye this afternoon.......her first outing with the shield......in fact her first real range day.Hey, Worm Raper (name brings up a really nice visual), please re-read what I posted:
"In my example, as in other related examples, when the shooter goes to disassemble his Shield, which popped its slide lock spring, and he can't remove the slide because the spring prevents it (a rather common occurrence), it's at that point that he realizes that the failures to eject or feed properly were most likely the result of the slide lock spring impinging on the slide, causing the malfunctions."
The translation for the reading-challenged is: when the spring pops, it is a common occurrence for the spring to prevent slide removal.
I apologize for writing so clearly and, thereby, causing some to be confused. [emoji14]
In summary, I'm done with this thread. It's not my thread, it's the forum's thread.
I had hoped it would be a contribution to all Shield owners to perform a very simple fix to prevent a possible serious future failure.
Sorry to have offended the S&W Kool-Aid drinkers; the word-parsers; the politically-correct thread critics; the reading-challenged; and the I-never-had-a-problem-with-mine denial crowd.
I sincerely do hope that no Shield owner has to contend with a popped slide lock spring problem.
Best Regards!
Posts on a forum have no statistical predictability whatsoever. There is no base control. Posts are skewed toward problems by the very nature of people seeking help. The number of people posting on a particular problem, even in multiple threads over time, compared to the total number of units in the market is infinitesimally small.
I enjoy gun forums for identification of potential problems and their suggested fixes. I allot very little significance to the quality of a gun based on the opinions and experiences of a very few, often unqualified, people. Much of the time the problems are not described accurately, and often they are caused by ignorance or operator error. Such information is completely unscientific and uncontrolled. I still use it, but with a shaker of salt sitting next to my work.
In this case, NoN posted a helpful maintenance tip that relates to a small percentage of the total number of Shields sold, with a significantly smaller percentage of units actually experiencing a functional problem caused because of the slide lock lever return spring. As I posted before, I believe this is good info explained in an OVERLY DRAMATIC FASHION !!! (See what I did there?)
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