A little fuel for the fire....
1. I bought and sold eight new .45 Shields since last April, 2017 and ALL of them failed me with intermittent failures-to-feed with ALL ammo and ALL magazines, even with NEW followers and all the tricks/fixes outlined in this forum tried, but to no avail.
2. I went round and round about the problem with S&W's factory LE reps, customer service reps and LE armorers. We are ALL experienced S&W owners and shooters and we ALL own other caliber Shields that have never exhibited this failure to feed problem.
3. I loved everything about those little .45's but, I could NEVER trust any of them because of their intermittent, unpredictable failures to feed so they all found new homes, with full disclosure of their unpredictability, at a healthy dollar loss to me. I still love S&W even though the .45 Shields didn't love me back!
4. I have friends who own .45 Shields with hundreds of rounds of all kinds of ammo downrange who swear by their reliability. I hate those guys!! (Just kidding.)
5. After my personal, semi-informed experience, I have come to believe that you MUST have a solid hold with locked wrist and elbow to provide an absolutely firm backstop for these little .45's to cycle properly or they will fail to feed reliably. My friends who swear by the .45 Shields are all ham-handed GORILLAS. I'm not.
CONCLUSION: The .45 Shield is a slightly flawed design because of its many dimensional and design compromises in order to achieve its desirably diminutive overall size and weight. Design compromises like in the .45 Shield require a gorilla-like grip and attention to ammunition sensitivity as part of the equation for reliable function.
Attention to these concerns may work for some shooters but not for me. I need a carry weapon that ALLOWS for weak-hand firing reliability and which DOES NOT require a death grip to feed reliably.
So, the lovable little .45 Shield, with its highly desirable sub-compactness, affordability and superior accuracy is a very personal-shooting-style-dependent choice of a weapon. Great for some, but not for others like me.
Please don't drive yourselves nuts if you have a flakey one like I did eight times over. Either accept it as it is or find someone else to provide it a good home. Someday, the factory engineers may introduce a dash 1 or dash 2, etc. version that corrects the design flaws to allow limp-wristers to enjoy the .45 Shield but, that certainly hasn't happened yet and the .45 Shield is going on 3 years old.
Hope this shines a little perspective on the issue...
