Thanks, Beauregard.
The FBI test is the only one by an "official expert" (?) lab I am aware of as well. We discussed it earlier in this thread, and it is followed, in post #118, by a YouTube guy who could not replicate the results, then, later in the thread, other YouTube guys, as per your post above, who could.
Lotta YouTube guys out there...
(Frankly, I have trouble following the inner workings of the P320 lockwork or trigger group or whatever the innards that control firing are called, but, yes, jamming a punch in there to induce failure does seem an improper testing method to me. See Sig's comments below.)
Here is a 7/24/25 Sig release which includes an FBI email* to Sig discussing the subsequent FBI testing which was unable to repeat the failures.
https://soldiersystems.net/wp-conte...Statement-to-FL-LE.pdf?utm_source=chatgpt.com
(I will note here that the site above appears credible, when I looked into it, but I do wonder why I cannot find Sig's 7/24 statement on their own site...)
The Sig statement also states that the Michigan State Police are now back to issuing the M18 to troopers.
This 7/17/25 article reviews the FBI initial testing, and then the subsequent FBI and Sig testing under mutually agreeable conditions:
https://www.twz.com/land/army-makin...0-derived-pistols-after-concerning-fbi-report
In it, Sig comments are quoted on why it thinks the initial FBI test was not proper:
“
Specifically, Sig explained that forcing the sear downward with a punch was moving the trigger bar forward and, as a result, the trigger to the rear since the sear is in constant contact with the trigger bar,” he continued. “Sig expressed that this was not a proper representation of the striker slipping off of the sear’s primary notch from a parallel/grip-down drop. Sig also noted that the FBI’s concern of the striker safety spring movement on the striker assembly post after getting hit with a hammer was unwarranted due to the viewing window that was cut into the slide that sacrificed the sidewall support of the striker safety spring.”
“After the initial report was submitted, Sig Sauer and its engineers worked in cooperation with the FBI and Michigan State Police to design a fixture that all agreed would create a more controlled testing protocol for striker/sear slippage,” St. John added. “Using that fixture, the FBI forced the sear off of the primary notch 565 times with 19EA different striker assemblies with zero indents on the primer (no fires).”
FWIW. (Not sure what that "19EA" means, but it was in the document I quoted so I left it there.)
* The FBI email linked in the article is hard to read. Here is a clean text version as reproduced by ChatGPT:
