__steve__
Member
Just got my Model 500 back from S&W for a repaired yoke. The excessive cylinder end play and slop is now almost nonexistent, cylinder gap went from 0.010 to 0.009” (not sure how but it was narrowed), and the action is a lot tighter and smoother than before. However a new problem manifested during this repair.
During my first session with repaired 500 (2 days after FedX delivered it back) I fired various commercial varieties of about a total of 20 rounds (Armscor 300, Hornady 500, and MagTech 325), and one resulted with a light primer strike. The pin barely hit the primer. I thought the light primer hit was probably from the gun being so cruddy since it still had some excess lubrication used to preserve the firearm during transport for repair back in October, plus a good deal of residue from S&W test firing (a lot more than 5). But I wanted to fire it first and clean after.
Here is the lite primer dud:
http://smith-wessonforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=489175&stc=1&d=1609437974
So I clean it real good and took it to the range thinking it should be good. I brought along my new chronograph to get a baseline for this treasured 3.5” magnum using 5 types of commercial loads (MagTech 325, Hornady 300, Hornady 500, Precision 350, Federal 275, and the soft hitting Armcor) to shoot in DA. Did 5 successful velocity readings of MagTech, then the first Hornady 300 FTX shot was a lite-primer dud. I thought maybe it was my technique - I was staging the DA or something, so I followed through this time, just plinking targets as my chronographical session was aborted. I loaded the cyl some factory 350gr and the 2nd one went “clack”, again I thought was a lite primer but now t this time. It was squibbed. I tried to clear the cylinder but it wouldn’t open - a 350 gr jacketed bullet was about half way in the barrel.
http://smith-wessonforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=489182&stc=1&d=1609439457
So now I have a squib cylinder jam with 3 live ones on board. During “hot” portions of range time I successfullytapped it back down:
http://smith-wessonforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=489177&stc=1&d=1609439457
*Turns out the squib was unrelated to the firing pin issue* edited
I believe my firing pin/spring assembly is malfunctioning. Intermittently jamming or sticking. Happened upon receiving this thing back from S&W. I can tell the pin feels funky (it randomly locks up and sticks). not looking forward to sending it back to S&W again for another 2.5 months to be returned and fixed for one thing, and potentially fail for another.
Comment to clarify things (edit) the firing pin issue was likely because I had way too much oil on gun from shipping, however the pin spring was corroded too. Should have taken apart and removed the residue. The reason I used a little oil for packaging was because when I bought this gun it was highly corroded. Mostly around the side panel to frame contact surfaces, and especially the screws and threads.
During my first session with repaired 500 (2 days after FedX delivered it back) I fired various commercial varieties of about a total of 20 rounds (Armscor 300, Hornady 500, and MagTech 325), and one resulted with a light primer strike. The pin barely hit the primer. I thought the light primer hit was probably from the gun being so cruddy since it still had some excess lubrication used to preserve the firearm during transport for repair back in October, plus a good deal of residue from S&W test firing (a lot more than 5). But I wanted to fire it first and clean after.
Here is the lite primer dud:
http://smith-wessonforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=489175&stc=1&d=1609437974
So I clean it real good and took it to the range thinking it should be good. I brought along my new chronograph to get a baseline for this treasured 3.5” magnum using 5 types of commercial loads (MagTech 325, Hornady 300, Hornady 500, Precision 350, Federal 275, and the soft hitting Armcor) to shoot in DA. Did 5 successful velocity readings of MagTech, then the first Hornady 300 FTX shot was a lite-primer dud. I thought maybe it was my technique - I was staging the DA or something, so I followed through this time, just plinking targets as my chronographical session was aborted. I loaded the cyl some factory 350gr and the 2nd one went “clack”, again I thought was a lite primer but now t this time. It was squibbed. I tried to clear the cylinder but it wouldn’t open - a 350 gr jacketed bullet was about half way in the barrel.
http://smith-wessonforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=489182&stc=1&d=1609439457
So now I have a squib cylinder jam with 3 live ones on board. During “hot” portions of range time I successfullytapped it back down:
http://smith-wessonforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=489177&stc=1&d=1609439457
*Turns out the squib was unrelated to the firing pin issue* edited
I believe my firing pin/spring assembly is malfunctioning. Intermittently jamming or sticking. Happened upon receiving this thing back from S&W. I can tell the pin feels funky (it randomly locks up and sticks). not looking forward to sending it back to S&W again for another 2.5 months to be returned and fixed for one thing, and potentially fail for another.
Comment to clarify things (edit) the firing pin issue was likely because I had way too much oil on gun from shipping, however the pin spring was corroded too. Should have taken apart and removed the residue. The reason I used a little oil for packaging was because when I bought this gun it was highly corroded. Mostly around the side panel to frame contact surfaces, and especially the screws and threads.
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