Aussie44;1238494My biggest beef with S&W is that they have changed the way their revolvers looked for generations.
The hammer (Hammer Nose)and trigger was and still is to me an S&W Icon.What they have done now is made a good gun look like a Taurus said:
No argument here!
The problems of machine parts is cost. Here in the states we are losing factory jobs daily. In my state, 1/2 the work force were at one time factory workers such as machine operators, engineers, machinists, tool & die, programers etc. We worked at firearm factories like Colt, Winchester, Remington, Ruger, Marlin & Stag arms. S&W is on the Connecticut border. The other factories were mostly defense contractors like Pratt & Whitney, Sikorsky aircraft and Electric boat (Submarine base).
Now, most factories are closed for good. Winchester gone, Ruger gone, Remington gone, Colt 75% closed, Pratt 75% closed etc. Where they go? China, India, England, Mexico and so on.
I know something about machining. If the people don't put the parts in clean fixtures, or if a chip is under the part, when the CNC machine does it's thing you now have a defective part. Tooling or machine temperature affects part sizing, the same as tool wear causes parts to be undercut or "oversized", even if coolant is used. Sure they have carbide tooling, but carbide wears too.
To avoid some of these sizing issues they built factories in 100% air conditioned machining areas to better control sizing and final product quality. Now here comes profitability. That's why they all leave, they can make parts cheaper else where. Now we are all jobless or soon to be.
MIM is the other method...
So we have a choice of a S&W made with MIM or closed if they continued making them like the good ole days. It's a tough pill to swallow. We are all losers in the end.