Takedown lever on M&P 45

WillyM&P

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Hello everyone,
I am new to the board and to owning an Smith & Wesson.
I picked up my M&P 45 this past Sunday from Turners (San Diego) and realized that the takedown lever does NOT (corrected) stay down when stripping the gun. In order to strip the gun, I have to use my thumb on the takedown lever to remove the slide.

I have been told this should not be happening.
Any input would be appreciated.

Thanks
Wil
 
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...and realized that the takedown lever does stay down when stripping the gun. In order to strip the gun, I have to use my thumb on the takedown lever to remove the slide.

Welcome to the forum. Do you mean that the lever does NOT stay down?

The takedown lever on my M&P9 does not stay down when I disassemble the gun. I use my thumb as you describe, otherwise the lever may come up and get stuck in a position that wasn't intended.
 
Yes, I meant to say "does NOT stay down".
Apparently it seems to be a common problem or known issue.
I e-mailed Smith and Wesson and they said that becuase of the close fit, SOME M&Ps' slides will make the takedown lever to come up to its original position, and that all of the compacts operate in this manner.
 
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On my 45 the take down lever will sometimes stay put and other times not. I just hold it with my thumb, as previously suggested, and remove the slide. I do not find this a problem as it forces me to be more deliberate with my work and for me that is not a bad thing. I do not view this as a malfunction.
Frank.
 
My 45 M&P does the same thing. The 9mm M&P does not. Go figure.
 
My M&P 40 does the same thing. Not a big deal, like you said, just use your thumb to hold it down.
 
My 45C's lever wants to move up also. In fact, when I reinstall the slide and push it to the rear the takedown lever pops up.
 
THis is a post I made back in March I think... if the TDL snapping back bothers you... this is what I found and what I did to fix it.

TDL = take down lever

Ok, well I feel pretty comfident about my assessment of the TDL snapping back. I like not having to be a contortionist to take my M&P down. I just picked up my new M&P40c a few weeks ago, the trigger sucks in Mass.. we in Mass know what that's like... I ordered my Apec trigger kit a month ago so it's on the bench ready to install tonite. I want to just update my findings from previous M&P's I own that do not need to have me hold the TDL while removing the upper slide assembly, as I stated, I had one that the TDL wouldn't stay down and fixed it, well my new 40c won't stay down so I checked it out, found a little high spot easily seen before removing the TDL, filed it down and my TDL stays down just fine now!! There was a little bump in the middle of the lever that was black, that means it was there from it's birth and colored over. After removing the slide, remove the TDL by turning it forward past the roll pin, then remove out the left side. You may be able to turn the lever over the roll pin or you may have to drive the pin in about an 1\8th of an inch and the TDL will turn easily forward then just pull the lever out. In the middle of the flat on the forward edge there is a little nub there, file it off so the surface is flat, install and your TDL should stay down much better. The spot we need to pay attention to is where the recoil guide rod makes contact with the TDL.
hope this makes sense and helps, let me know.
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I discoverd the same problem when I was cleaning my 9mm today. I had to use my thumb sometimes to hold down the takedown lever and sometimes I didn't. Since this is a common problem, has anyone noticed if it has affected the performance of the gun?


Thanks,

Matt
 
I discoverd the same problem when I was cleaning my 9mm today. I had to use my thumb sometimes to hold down the takedown lever and sometimes I didn't. Since this is a common problem, has anyone noticed if it has affected the performance of the gun?


Thanks,

Matt

I can't say as there are any performance problems related to the take down lever, other than the PITA of it snapping back during take-down. Bottom line, if it bothers you, there is a fix. If it doesn't bother you, that's why God gave us thumbs... :)
 
what about em?

I think read your post differently from what you meant. I was refering to why most gun manufacturers now require return of the guns to the factory for even the simplest of fixes.

If a gun manufacturer instructs a customer on how to fix the weapon, and then the customer botches the work and is injured, the factory could be held liable.
 
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We just purchased an M&P 45 full size last week. The pistol functions flawlessly, except for the takedown lever. The lever springs back to the 'normal' position at every opportunity. We have also noticed that the slide periodically gets stuck on the frame, either coming off or going back on. We are well aware of the sear disconnect lever and are using that too according to the manual's procedure. Taking the pistol down and reassembling it is very awkward when the TDL won't stay PUT.

I'm no expert gunsmith, but it's obvious the TDL has two static positions it can (and should!) take, as defined by the two flat spots on the TDL shaft. The first is wider and normal, where the guide rod spring is seated agains the larger, flat face. The second is for takedown; the guide rod spring should transition from the normal face to the (smaller) takedown face when rotated. From the previous notes on the fix (filing off the nub on the TDL face), it seems fairly obvious for whatever reason the end of the guide rod spring is not transitioning properly, and/or not staying put after the transition. There's nothing special about this. Our Sig and FN pistol TDLs work exactly the same way. Only their TDLs stay put!

I'll be phoning S&W about this tomorrow to send it back and get it fixed. We did not pay $700+ to accept this kind of erratic behavior.

I must say I am surprised that a fair number of M&P owners seem willing to accept this behavior and wrestle with it. The S&W manual is very clear on the takedown procedure, and nowhere does it say anything about using two hands, holding the TDL in position, or anything else remotely close to that. The pictures are equally as obvious and speak for themselves as to how the lever should behave.

I'll post up with the outcome when I have one.
 
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