If you have not read any of my previous posts about the Sigma 40ev you probably should after you read this one.
I went up to the firing line today and I brought my full arsenal. My Dad came with because he is thinking about purchasing his first gun and wanted to get a feel of the different calibers. I brought around 3,500 rounds with me for some pistols (including my Sigma), rifles, carbines, and some shotguns.
We had shot quite a few rounds with almost everything and then I decided to pull out the old Sigma 40ve. For those of you that don't know, I have fired about 18,000 rounds through this gun and have made it a mission to see when this gun will fail. I have put the worst ammo through this gun imaginable, cast reloads, +p cast reloads, +p, +p+, aluminum cases, steel, you name it. Well today I was firing Wolff ammo. These are the worst of the worst in my book and I would not fire them out of any of my other guns even if I were told "the gun would be replaced with a new one". I fired 390 rounds though it, the last 50 were rapid fire. On shot 391 the gun froze and I did not know if it was a FTF or FT eject ot what it was. All I know is the gun was frozen, the slide was not back far enough to remove it and not forward enough to rack the slide, just frozen in place.
This is where it gets interesting. I called the range master over to my bench and explained to him the situation and there was a round stuck in the barrel. He asked, "Is the round spent or live". I told him that I did not know. Then he did something I had never seen or heard of and never really want to see again as long as I live. He proceeded to take a 10" steel rod in one hand and pick the Sigma up by the muzzle, look down the barrel, stick one end of the rod down the barrel and start jamming the rod into it. Remember I don't know if the round is live or spent. After he did that for about 10 seconds and had everyone just starring at him in amazement at such ahww I took the gun out of his hand and gave him my opinion of what an [you can guess] he was and told him he had no business at all working on a firing line and especially as a range master, along with a few other choice words. I went back to my truck and got an eyeglass repair kit which has a tiny screw driver, got it behind the stuck round and pried it a little further into the barrel so the slide would close. I took the slide off and saw the round had been spent already. It was stuck in the barrel pretty good; it took some force with pliers to get it out. What happened was, the round had exploded in the barrel and was cracked, broken and stuck in the barrel. I proceeded to remove it and fire an additional 100 rounds through it without incident.
That's my story of "I got the gun to jam". This was of no fault of the gun, just really bad ammo. I plan on purchasing another in the next few months in a 9mm. I personally have put this gun through hell, on purpose to try to get it to fail on me. The gun has not failed only one cartridge has had a problem and it was bad ammo anyway. If this was a Glock and I had put it through this kind of abuse, the gun would have exploded and been ruined LONG ago.
I recommend the S&W Sigma SW40ve or the 9mm version to anyone that wants a gun that is extremely reliable, can feed any ammo, safe to use for a beginner or expert and is just an all around durable gun with a lifetime warranty to boot.
I went up to the firing line today and I brought my full arsenal. My Dad came with because he is thinking about purchasing his first gun and wanted to get a feel of the different calibers. I brought around 3,500 rounds with me for some pistols (including my Sigma), rifles, carbines, and some shotguns.
We had shot quite a few rounds with almost everything and then I decided to pull out the old Sigma 40ve. For those of you that don't know, I have fired about 18,000 rounds through this gun and have made it a mission to see when this gun will fail. I have put the worst ammo through this gun imaginable, cast reloads, +p cast reloads, +p, +p+, aluminum cases, steel, you name it. Well today I was firing Wolff ammo. These are the worst of the worst in my book and I would not fire them out of any of my other guns even if I were told "the gun would be replaced with a new one". I fired 390 rounds though it, the last 50 were rapid fire. On shot 391 the gun froze and I did not know if it was a FTF or FT eject ot what it was. All I know is the gun was frozen, the slide was not back far enough to remove it and not forward enough to rack the slide, just frozen in place.
This is where it gets interesting. I called the range master over to my bench and explained to him the situation and there was a round stuck in the barrel. He asked, "Is the round spent or live". I told him that I did not know. Then he did something I had never seen or heard of and never really want to see again as long as I live. He proceeded to take a 10" steel rod in one hand and pick the Sigma up by the muzzle, look down the barrel, stick one end of the rod down the barrel and start jamming the rod into it. Remember I don't know if the round is live or spent. After he did that for about 10 seconds and had everyone just starring at him in amazement at such ahww I took the gun out of his hand and gave him my opinion of what an [you can guess] he was and told him he had no business at all working on a firing line and especially as a range master, along with a few other choice words. I went back to my truck and got an eyeglass repair kit which has a tiny screw driver, got it behind the stuck round and pried it a little further into the barrel so the slide would close. I took the slide off and saw the round had been spent already. It was stuck in the barrel pretty good; it took some force with pliers to get it out. What happened was, the round had exploded in the barrel and was cracked, broken and stuck in the barrel. I proceeded to remove it and fire an additional 100 rounds through it without incident.
That's my story of "I got the gun to jam". This was of no fault of the gun, just really bad ammo. I plan on purchasing another in the next few months in a 9mm. I personally have put this gun through hell, on purpose to try to get it to fail on me. The gun has not failed only one cartridge has had a problem and it was bad ammo anyway. If this was a Glock and I had put it through this kind of abuse, the gun would have exploded and been ruined LONG ago.
I recommend the S&W Sigma SW40ve or the 9mm version to anyone that wants a gun that is extremely reliable, can feed any ammo, safe to use for a beginner or expert and is just an all around durable gun with a lifetime warranty to boot.