You are correct, but EVRYBODY considers ALL pre-war S&W's safe from self-ignition at a time not of your choosing. The SIG has displayed itself to be unsafe when it is assembled and a loaded magazine is inserted. A very different condition.Reminder the Sig mishap is not a new story. The design of the Smith & Wesson Victory Model (Model 10) was modified in 1945 to include an improved hammer block after a sailor was killed by a loaded revolver discharging when accidentally dropped onto a steel deck. Many don't consider pre-war Smiths drop safe, and carry the hammer on an empty chamber.
Additionally, during the middle of a war, a literal world war, Smith & Wesson immediately acknowledge the issue with the hammer, engineered a solution and implemented it. No lawsuits, no denial, just action and accountability. That’s how it should be done.You are correct, but EVRYBODY considers ALL pre-war S&W's safe from self-ignition at a time not of your choosing. The SIG has displayed itself to be unsafe when it is assembled and a loaded magazine is inserted. A very different condition.
Yes, Yes............ we get it. It can't possibly happen.The Glock and M&P strikers are only under partial tension and not enough to pierce a primer (if the striker could get past the striker safety) and then only if the trigger safety is depressed allowing the trigger to move reward.
Except Tylenol covered up the fact that cyanide was used in the testing process inside their own factory..I agree with Benton. The best case study on how to handle a product problem was the Tylenol problem. They did not question reported problems, pulled the product and cured the problem. Sig should take a lesson from this and move forward to investigate, warn and if necessary recall the weapon for a cure. Conducting an opposition PR campaign is futile and multiply losses.
Holding the trigger partially depressed with a screw while manipulating the slide appears to me as simulating negligence. Someone having their finger on the trigger while holstering or the trigger being partially depressed by snagging on something while holstering.Video Shows Just How Bad Issues With Sig P320 May Be
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Video Shows Just How Bad Issues With Sig P320 May Be
Explore the serious issues surrounding the Sig P320 and its safety concerns.bearingarms.com
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Well there were issues prior to what for lack of having a schematic in front of me I will call a disconnector lock and the slot/window the had to add to the early version. Recent incidents from the Air Force to recent testing by the Michigan State Police and FBI tests. Tests have set aside all concerns of the previous issues. Michigan State Police are still using the 320, as if every branch of Federal law enforcement and all branched of the military (including Air Force on other bases).First, the trigger fix was not for this current issue; it was a response to the drop test failures that were brought to light by Omaha Outdoors in 2017. Sig made the change to a lighter trigger and a couple other modifications as part of their "voluntary upgrade" to address the problem with inertia firing the gun when dropped on the rear of the slide. That has absoluetly nothing to do with the current ADs being reported. No connection whatsoever. It's just yet another shameful chapter in the hasty and substandard engineering that went into development of the P320, a striker fired modification of their existing hammer fired P250. Second, they didn't do it out of the kindness of their tender hearts; they did it because they were getting their asses handed to them in the court of public opinion, just as they are now. All the while, they were telling their customer base that there was nothing wrong with the gun; the "voluntary upgrade" was a fix for a problem that they claimed didn't exist, yet it addressed a known safety issue to a gun they claimed wasn't unsafe, so the "voluntary upgrade" enhanced the safety of a perfectly safe gun, only now it was safer and there was never a problem even though that upgraded trigger solved a problem that they said didn't exist, despite our lying eyes seeing the problem that was nonexistant. Then, they also quietly changed the design to multiple parts and didn't inform P320 owners of the changes... because there was nothing wrong with the gun... no, these changes were merely enhancements because the gun was perfectly safe. Just ask them.
They earned every bit of the bad publicity for their outright lies, arrogance, and contempt for their paying customers.
Sigh! Here we go again.Will the questions continue to be asked every time some has an accidental discharge because the neglected to recognize the primary safety for every gun is the same? Of course I mean keeping your finger clear of the trigger guard until your sights are on target.
Doesn't matter! We've got our mitts on it now! (Were you around when some guy posted about not liking thread drift? We all jumped in and drifted the bejeez outta that thread for weeks — months? — until the Big Griller shut it down because it was gobbling all his bandwidth!)What if it's my thread??![]()
Yep, and I thnk it is going to get worse.Sigh! Here we go again.
How did that poor Air Force grunt get his finger on the trigger from across the room?