Rust E. Badge
Member
- Joined
- Jun 24, 2016
- Messages
- 71
- Reaction score
- 161
Smith and Wesson Polymer Pistols
I have tried to like the polymer Smiths, but just cannot do it. I have at last count owned 7 of them to date. The longest one was owned for just shy of 6 months. Various calibers, barrel lengths, frame sizes. I don’t own a 10mm, and won’t even try one after having owned the previous half dozen.
Hey Rick
I am a recently retired police officer and a S&W M&P armorer, as well as, a Glock Master armorer. I started in law enforcement in 1984 carrying model 686 (I am a very dangerous man with a 686), transitioned to a Glock product in 1989 then back to S&W again in 2018 with the M&P 2.0. I have completed armorers work on 1000's of pistols, have taught gunfighting to 1000's of officers nationwide (and still do) and feel that my experience qualifies me for a small cup of coffee BUT here goes anyway...Glocks break like any other mechanical device. Being one city away from Glock made it easy to garner their support, which was needed many times, primarily for broken springs, worn sears and trigger bars, broken trigger pins or locking block pins, the rare missing slide rail and one cracked chamber. They are not magic are not natural for highly intense combat shooting. Our agency transitioned to the 2.0 and never looked back, in fact, even our officers who had only fired Glocks professionally, fell in love. The 2.0 is an easier pistol to teach new shooters and is certainly more natural to fight with. Having issued these pistols, witnessed them in training and street usage, and maintaining these 2.0's, I quickly garnered great respect for their quality and ability to perform even under strenuous conditions. This includes Shields for each officer as a back-up pistol. S&W customer service has always been superb but I say that knowing that the service was through the LE division not the general service department. I fear that S&W has adopted the business model of releasing an unresolved and problematic product (no item can wait till perfect for release) with the policy of fixing the mechanical problems as product is returned. This puts more product on the shelves earlier but results in a higher return rate. (think automotive industry here) It also results in a damaged reputation that is hard to regain in this modern market. All manufacturers do this to some extent and I wish I was not seeing it from my beloved S&W.