Rickgus-
I was pretty much kidding and fantasizing about S&W recruiting me to be part of their design team, and getting their blessing to do any work on this pistol.
I know it can seem nutty that I am obsessed about getting this gun working right, but as you know, this has been a puzzle to me for a long time. When I saw that the hammer was getting hung up, it seemed like an obvious thing to consider.
I have been working with a great guy on a Ruger forum, of all places, who really knows this gun, and guns in general. He has been walking through basically every component of the pistol, one step at a time. It has been interesting to learn the details of how this gun works.
I know it seems the smart solution is to keep sending it back to Smith. But that's getting old for several reasons. First, the Fed Ex place is at the opposite side of the county so I lose an hour and a half just driving there and back. Then I am without it for a couple weeks, and find I don't carry when I should because my second gun is so big, comparatively. Then I have to arrange to be home to sign for it when it returns. Then I have to arrange range time and spend $50-100 on ammo to test it.
It seems like S&W, as cooperative as they are, isn't really doing anything to diagnose what is wrong with these guns. They are just making their best guess, replacing a part or two, putting a few rounds through it, and sending it back.
Thanks, as always, for your ideas and support.
David