M&P dead trigger

They LOST a revolver you sent in??? Um, how did they respond to that?

Since he seems to know it was S&W who "lost" it, as opposed to FedEx, UPS or the carrier used, I suspect what he means is that he sent in a revolver, then emailed or called about it, the person on the phone could tell it had been logged in, but could not, by computer terminal, tell if it was still in receiving, or if it had been sent to a technician for evaluation, or exactly WHERE in the massive place it was at that moment. Thus, it was "lost."

I was looking at when this thread started, and if it had simply been boxed up and sent to S&W then with a simple note "dead trigger" the thing would have probably been fixed by now.

But, we live in an age where the media wants to get every last gasp out of every controversial story, and apparently that attitude rubs off.

Sorry about that, but the continual S&W bashing and wringing of hands over this issue, instead of just taking care of it, reminds me of the McClellan problem of the Civil War. McClellan was a "great little organizer," but organized everything to death thinking about action. His trepidation and reluctance to act reminds me of this situation.

The gun in question is perhaps malfunctioning. If the weapon owner cannot figure it out, and the people who have watched the video in this thread cannot either, then just send it in and let S&W fix it. Period. End of drama. End of complaints. Problem solved.

Sorry, but agonizing over fixing a gun is just not worth the time or effort. Send it in to S&W.

Sorry about that.
 
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I was looking at when this thread started, and if it had simply been boxed up and sent to S&W then with a simple note "dead trigger" the thing would have probably been fixed by now.

Sorry, but agonizing over fixing a gun is just not worth the time or effort. Send it in to S&W.
Well said. Yes, we spend far too much time worrying and too little time acting.
 

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