Annihilator
Member
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2005
- Messages
- 10
- Reaction score
- 15
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..... S&W customer service is great ......
I have come to a few conclusions on S&W, there is no quality control anymore, MIM parts are not what we were lead to believe in, I was going to get rid of this gun, but it shoots great and trigger is awesome now.
I have come to a few conclusions on S&W, there is no quality control anymore, MIM parts are not what we were lead to believe in, I was going to get rid of this gun, but it shoots great and trigger is awesome now.
I am wondering how a gun shipped in June '14 is only now being sold as new. Where has it been? Has it been sitting on a shelf that entire time?
While I do agree that S&W quality control is lacking, I do believe they still make lots of quality guns. They now assemble guns instead of fit them. Some of the assemblers need more training or a different job. That is our world. Check out the problems people have with any new car or truck. But, they will fix the problems.
We do hear about the guns that have to go back multible times, some of this is not excusable. Some of it is intermittent problems are hard to diagnose. Part of it is customers who don't really get revolvers. Some of it is S&W failure. Also once something has a problem it is going to get nit picked to death from then on. If your gun doesn't work right at first afterwards your going to double check every minor detail. Plus, as the most popular S&W website on a internet connected world we are going to hear about almost everyone of them.
Were all the older guns perfect? I highly doubt it. People and machines have NEVER been infallible and never will be.
I have several S&W revolvers that are under 10 years old a 396, a 500, a 325, a 640. All of them work flawless. On the other hand I have picked up several much older used guns with issues. Some of them from some type of abuse, some who knows. My favorite shooter is a 18-3 I got new years ago. Had a horrible trigger, had to clean up the ratchet, barrel started to unscrew. Got those fixed and have run thousands of various 22lr through it since with no problems and thats without cleaning it nearly as much as I should. Sure glad I didn't give up on S&W when I got that gun because of its horrible quality control. I absolutely love that gun now and I would have missed out on the great enjoyment of some built after that.
Hate the lock, don't mind MIM at all, think CNC is great, in frame firing pins are fine as are hammer mounted. They had some learning curve problems with stainless. There is always a learning curve. I doubt the first time they tried to make a triple lock that it came out perfect, but then it also didn't leave the factory until it was. But, then where thousands of people lighting up the internet and the phones asking for one. How many people have asked about the model 69 snub, where are they, when are they coming, how come I can't find one? How much competition did S&W have in 1910? How much now? How many stock holders did they have breathing down their neck for dividends in the 19 teens? Yada yada yada.
Was planning to buy a 686 competition and sold a gun to fund it. I've pretty much decided against purchasing any new Smith handgun in light of the prices versus the reports of ridiculous issues I've seen and read about. .![]()
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Lastly, my point in this post was that this should have not left the factory like it was, period, customers should never have to be a factory's "quality control inspector".