Who has experienced a MIM parts failure?

Gasman1972

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Who among you have experienced a MIM part failure in a S&W revolver?

What part failed?

How did it fail?


Thanks.
 
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MIM parts have gotten a bad rep in my opinion. people always seems to complain about them, but can't link to an actual failure. i'll be watching this thread to see if any pop up.
 
I saw a used M-64 with a cracked MIM hammer, in a gun store. I think it was a M-64. Some late K-frame .38 or .357.

They had two, and one had this flaw. I think they were former cop guns. The damaged one had probably been dropped.
 
Who among you have experienced a MIM part failure in a S&W revolver?

What part failed?

How did it fail?


Thanks.

Why are you asking this? Everything will brake and this subject isn't a very good one for a new member to bring up! MIM and forged parts will break. The only good part about the MIM parts is that it is just as hard in the center as it is on the outside, where the forge parts are surface hard only .006-.008 thick. The frame mount firing pin is a upgrade in my thinking, but there is nothing like a old Smith to look at. We are talking about two different guns. Its like watching Halley Berry and some gal that is a track star, two different worlds and I like them both :D .
 
Why are you asking this? Everything will brake and this subject isn't a very good one for a new member to bring up! MIM and forged parts will break. The only good part about the MIM parts is that it is just as hard in the center as it is on the outside, where the forge parts are surface hard only .006-.008 thick. The frame mount firing pin is a upgrade in my thinking, but there is nothing like a old Smith to look at. We are talking about two different guns. Its like watching Halley Berry and some gal that is a track star, two different worlds and I like them both :D .

well said... it seems to be a no win topic. It would be a great story for one of those tv programs, like Urban Legends.. True or False... :) they could research the IL's too and while they are at it... research old guns and any possible problems they may have had.. According to some people, the "old S&W" never had a problem... :)
 
well said... it seems to be a no win topic. It would be a great story for one of those tv programs, like Urban Legends.. True or False... :) they could research the IL's too and while they are at it... research old guns and any possible problems they may have had.. According to some people, the "old S&W" never had a problem... :)

I agree - its not like you can ask S&W to build you a 'special' item w/o MIM parts. In all likelyhood - they are here to stay.
 
The only good part about the MIM parts is that it is just as hard in the center as it is on the outside, where the forge parts are surface hard only .006-.008 thick.

Bullseye,

Are you sure you do not have this backwards?

My understanding was that MIM was only surfaced hardened after being sintered while a forged part is made out of bar stock which is consistent all the way through.

I am by no means a metallurgist or an engineer.
 
Thinking of starting a thread, "How many "old" Smiths have you ever seen fail?". Not trying to be a "smartie" either (well, maybe :) ). Point is I was a true range rat in my former LEO days and a Range Officer for our Dept (we had our own range) and many sport type shooters have no clue how often ANY machine will fail. I'm talking watching over 150 officers fire close to a million rounds per year.

The oldies failed too folks. And more often than you'd think. Dropped guns, broken firing pins, bent yokes, malfunctioning ejector stars (get a round caught under one and you'll truly understand that ANY machine can and will fail), and the accumlated gunk and goo that gets into the internals on a lazy coppers pistola.

Just saying is all but I too will be watching this thread to see if the massive amounts of negative MIM lore can be backed up with anything more than an occasional antecdotal story, or two.
 
Right on again magger... it's pretty funny now, I'm beginning to chuckle inside more and more when I see the same few guys takin wacks at anything newer out here... I just came from one of my local GD's, picking up a rifle I bought off GBer.. sure enough, I look in the case... model 19-3 I think was the prefix, nickle plated, stubby nose on it, 357mag... I just shot my 640 last night for the first time, shot 50rds of 357mag.. what a blast... I had to put the 19 in the closet.. I had Mike put it in the back for me.. it's a pre lock, I imagine forged hammer, so a few guys should be happy to hear that here..

Here's a few IL's I bought this year since the 1st.. hope they work ok, I figure I'll ccw the Bone Collector, carry the SW500-4" for back-up and use the 640 from my ankle in case the other 2 MIM hammers break.. or are they MIM? :D
Sorry for the poor pics, shot it from my cell phone before heading to work this morning.

2011guns-1.jpg


2011guns-1.jpg
 
Bullseye,

Are you sure you do not have this backwards?

My understanding was that MIM was only surfaced hardened after being sintered while a forged part is made out of bar stock which is consistent all the way through.

I am by no means a metallurgist or an engineer.

The forged are case harden, the mim is heated in the mold, it get treated all the way inside and out. the forged is the one you can't stone but a very little. Look at my thread "match Gun" the hammer in that gun is MIM and just as shinny as the rest of the gun. It was a pain to cut.
 
Don't get me wrong Brother, I too lust after Mod 27's in 3.5", or a pristine Triple Lock, or...whatever. (if you do a search here in other forum's you'll see pics from me of 1926 Wolf & Klar's, prewar K's, etc. that have gone thru my mitts over the years). But there seems to be some type of stasis that sets in on gunfolk in particular that "the way it was" is somehow mystical.

As a matter of art perhaps that's true. The machining and handfitting that went into, particularly the pre wars is imo stunning. But to think that they are better functioning, or more accurate, is not...uh...accurate.

Not on the planet I inhabit anyway. YPMV. The "oldies" had their warts and scabs too.

Flame suit on, mask down, let em rip.
 
Considering that M.I.M. parts have been with us now for what,16 years?
If there had been a quantity of failures, we would have seen them
here on the forum and other places.
Believe me, the cats that watch for this kind of thing would have been
all over it.
The bottom line is; there just have not been enough m.i.m. parts
failures to note.
Only one where the part from the factory was defective that
I can recall. And that was a trigger rebound slide.

M.i.m. parts are just no better/ no worse than forged, they just are.

The lock is a whole nother story. Especially with that goofy arrow
acid etched into the FRAME above the hole to tell you which
way to turn it.
My gosh, if we ever bent to the left in our lifetimes, this is the
greatest example.

No rant. Just my very own opinion.

Good luck
Allen Frame

Edited to add;

A lot of m.i.m. parts here on my favorite model 625s'.
If I had AnY doubt whatsoever about their ability to perform their
function, they would have been sent back to S&W P.C. for forged
parts replacement.




Nframeroundbuttsnewgrips2072011002.jpg
 
Let me say thank you for all the replies first......Thank you.

Now let me clarify:

I'm no MIM hater myself and I've never personally seen a MIM part failure in a S&W or any other firearm. The reason I ask is because I have heard and do still hear some S&W purists claim they will not buy any new S&W's because of the MIM parts. Therefore I wondered if S&W had real issues with their MIM parts.

I personally think S&W still makes the best revolver available and have two newer models myself that even have the lock.

This thread was in no way an attack on S&W nor a bashing of MIM, it was simply out of curiosity. I should have worded my OP better and for that I apologize.
 
Let me say thank you for all the replies first......Thank you.

Now let me clarify:

I'm no MIM hater myself and I've never personally seen a MIM part failure in a S&W or any other firearm. The reason I ask is because I have heard and do still hear some S&W purists claim they will not buy any new S&W's because of the MIM parts. Therefore I wondered if S&W had real issues with their MIM parts.

I personally think S&W still makes the best revolver available and have two newer models myself that even have the lock.

This thread was in no way an attack on S&W nor a bashing of MIM, it was simply out of curiosity. I should have worded my OP better and for that I apologize.

No need for apology imo, welcome to the crew !!!!!!!!

It's just that you've inadvertantly touched a nerve in those of us with the unmitigated GALL to purchase a newer Smith product. How dare we? You'll note the 6 billion paged sticky at the top of this section about the lock, the hole, the worst thing to happen on the planet since the Dems turned leftward, etc. It's all in fun (maybe not for some, to judge by some of the emotion in some of those posts :) ) hopefully.

Do we like it? Don't know of a person who says they do, at best it becomes a non issue that doesn't get in the way of some mighty fine shooting irons (shooting titaniums just doesn't "zing" does it?). Bet you that most regular posters in this section own and enjoy BOTH pre and post lock S&W's. As for me, sorry, the PC is turning out some MIGHTY fine revolvers these days an with the inclusion of "the Plug" and my poor eyesight, I can't see the hole anymore and hence don't fret about it. And Allen Frame is right though, that arrow is pretty goofy, I'll admit. Kind of like directions on shampoo.

Again, Welcome to The Crew.

(don't let it happen again) :)
 
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I shoot my MIM guns more than any of my forged revolvers.......haven't had a failure yet. My 617 has thousands of .22's through it,I shoot that revolver until the barrel is too hot to touch, and I don't baby it...... nothing has failed.
 
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