Nah, I thought it was a lube issue. If you read my original post.
I was using pure teflon, it's not lithium grease, it feels like butter. The most expensive lubricant in the world.
But I removed it all except for some on the trigger.
Those guns were screwing up with nothing but a few drops of Eezox oil.
That white you see is just some that was left over, the guns have no grease inside them at all.
I don't think I am being melodramatic at all.
I have defended Sigmas vigorously.
HOWEVER. What are the odds that I get 3 semi auto Polymer pistols
in ONE MONTH that need to go back to the shop? I would say slim to none if the design is good.
Note that the issues did not occur right away, it was around round 100 issues started.
I have read others ( and frankly discounted) reports of light primer strikes and FTE in both Glocks and Sigmas.
In fact I was reading( I have it at home on my favorites) a report from a police captain pulling all his Glocks for this reason.
The Glock reps coming to the states saying it was impossible, but leaving shaking their heads. These guns sound suspiciously just like my guns.
Just maybe there are a LOT of Sigma owners who never make it to round 200???
They shoot a box, like I did at first, put it away and never get to 200.
Or they shoot a box at a time and clean it well between use and never get malfunctions. Mine don't act up on the first box at all.
It's not really a "range" gun, so could be that case?
I don't know.
I do know I have two brand new sigmas doing the exact same thing, with different ammo, different mags, different lubes, and both are barely
hitting the primers.
Believe it or not, it's happened. That is either a design flaw or two bad runs of parts in guns bought from companies hundreds of miles apart.
I wouldn't have believed it if I didn't have the guns sitting in my
backseat either.
Either way, it ain't my fault, Smith produced a couple of lemons.