Want to make a Minor change to my 4013tsw

KingArthur

Member
Joined
Apr 20, 2012
Messages
36
Reaction score
1
Location
Jacksonville, Ar
Mine has ambi safeties and was wondering if anyone has removed one safety like on a CS9 I saw a picture of. The CS9 has a flat plug where the safety lever would be on the right side. Would that work on the 4013tsw? Where would I find that part?
 
Register to hide this ad
Not a plug, but a complete non ambidextrous safety. Yes you can put one in your 4013 you just have to find one . I've done it on my 6906 and my 639. I would do it to all of my 3rd gens if I could find a less costly way of doing it.
 
Good evening, Your Highness,
Unfortunately, the flat plug on the right side is the other end of the safety. You would need to find a single sided safety body. I think a safety body from a 410 or 411 might work, but I haven't tried.
Smith & Wesson, Midway USA, Numrich Arms, GunBroker are the places I'd look.
Good luck!
John
 
What are the names of the parts i need. I found a Manual safety lever plunger on midway...is that one of the parts.

I haven't found a single sided safety yet. I guess this is gonna be a tough find.

Sent from my SPH-L710 using Tapatalk now Free
 
The S&W part # is 201990000 but they won't have it. Numrich is most likely your best shot , it will cost about $65. I have a question, do you know how to remove your firing pin ?
 
Cpeblue is right, try this link if it works
http://www.gunpartscorp.com/Products/326820.htm
I believe if you reach it the LS in >Safety Body, Manual, LS< may stand for left side (only).
If my CS9 was the one you saw, I sent my CS9 to S&W to do a DAO conversion, which is where the plug came from.
sypyde9e.jpg

nusyna9u.jpg
 
The S&W part # is 201990000 but they won't have it. Numrich is most likely your best shot , it will cost about $65. I have a question, do you know how to remove your firing pin ?

Thank you for the part number. Gonna look for it when I get home. As for the firing pin and installing the new safety was going to be my next adventure. Or let a gun smith do it.

Sent from my SPH-L710 using Tapatalk now Free
 
did you ever fin the 4013tsw safety you were looking for. I just bought a 4013tsw with the single sided safety and I want the 2 sided safety. Willing to trade even if your interested
 
Replacing one manual safety body assembly with another one usually requires replacing and fitting a new sear release lever in the frame. This is an important part of the decocking function, as the tolerance between these two parts sets the "timing" of the decocking, which is critical for safety reasons. (Having a gun go BANG during decocking is not good, and having a gun where the hammer won't decock at all when the manual safety lever is fully lowered isn't good either.)

Fitting a new sear release requires filing the foot of the lever, while carefully maintaining 2 critical angles of the foot's surface while shortening it so the proper decocking timing is achieved.

This used to be done by eye-ball during manipulation of the manual safety lever and observing hammer fall, but in more recent years armorers were told to use 3 different "gages" (the non-cutting ends of numbered metal drill bits) to check for the proper timing and how much a lever might need to be filed for any particular gun.

Yes, the process requires some knowledge of detailed disassembly & reassembly of the frame, as well as repeated assembly and disassembly while the lever is being filed and the decocking timing is checked (often after each single file stroke, as you get close to the right tolerance). It can be a tedious process.

It used to be even more tedious when the levers were cut really overly long for older guns (more generous tolerances in guns in those days), but as newer guns were being produced to tighter tolerances the newer levers weren't being cut quite so overly long.

This is something that really ought to be done and checked by a factory tech, a smith familiar with repairing 3rd gen S&W's or someone trained as an armorer (and preferably has gained some experience in doing it).
 

Latest posts

Back
Top