OK, call me old fashioned. But the more I think about it, the more I appreciate the older Smith & Wesson handguns. And here, I'm referring to those made prior to 1995. I know that new materials, CNC machining. MIM and stamped parts, internal locks, rubber stocks and boiler-plate instructions are essential to lower cost manufacturing and political correctness, but I really appreciate the older guns made in the old way. Forged steel, hand-fitted parts that look right and function right. Nicely-grained wood stocks that are handsome. Instruction sheets that match the gun rather than being "generic." No product warnings that state the obvious (guns are dangerous, etc.). Handsome presentation cases. Pinned and recessed elegance. And the hell of it is, the modern guns cost more at retail than their finer excellent condition predecessors do on the used market.
U.S. Firearms makes Colt single action replicas better than the modern ones made by Colt. I wonder if they could make Smith and Wessons better, too? I read about over-torqued barrels, warped cranes, cracked frames, burrs and polishing defects, heavy trigger pulls, malfunctioning internal locks etc., and I'm sure that's due to the bean-counters pushing to get the product out the door cheaply and expeditiously. Wouldn't it really be cheaper to make them right before they are shipped rather than have to take returns in order to fix the boo-boos?
Here's the way Smiths ought to look - the word is elegance and it's missing today. The more or less nostalgic "classic series" guns still aren't made or fitted in the old way, and the details no longer match the originals.
Here's what I'm talking about, folks. These are worthy of the name "Smith & Wesson!"
John
I rest my case.
U.S. Firearms makes Colt single action replicas better than the modern ones made by Colt. I wonder if they could make Smith and Wessons better, too? I read about over-torqued barrels, warped cranes, cracked frames, burrs and polishing defects, heavy trigger pulls, malfunctioning internal locks etc., and I'm sure that's due to the bean-counters pushing to get the product out the door cheaply and expeditiously. Wouldn't it really be cheaper to make them right before they are shipped rather than have to take returns in order to fix the boo-boos?
Here's the way Smiths ought to look - the word is elegance and it's missing today. The more or less nostalgic "classic series" guns still aren't made or fitted in the old way, and the details no longer match the originals.
Here's what I'm talking about, folks. These are worthy of the name "Smith & Wesson!"
John





















I rest my case.
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