And Allen Frame is right though, that arrow is pretty goofy, I'll admit. Kind of like directions on shampoo.
Unfortunately, I have met a few people that couldn't pour pi$$ out of a boot if the directions were written on the heel.

Buck
And Allen Frame is right though, that arrow is pretty goofy, I'll admit. Kind of like directions on shampoo.
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.
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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.
I bought a new no lock 642 on 1 Aug 08. After the first weekend of dry firing / getting used to the trigger,and 40 rounds live fire, the inconsistent, hard trigger pull and the metal filings / dust coming out of the trigger's slot in the frame told me something was up. Off to S&W it went, on their dime fortunately. Came back with an invoice that said "Replaced sear."
So yeah, I've had a MIM failure.
I've bought MIM S&W revolvers since then too, so I realize MIM is reality and not inherently evil or anything. But it ain't perfect.
Noo, not really. You had a sear failure.![]()
Kimber gave MIM parts a bad name due to buying from contractors that didn't know what they doing. Chances are that the vehicle you drive has MIM connecting rods. They take more abuse in one hour than a weapon does in a lifetime.
Kimber gave MIM parts a bad name due to buying from contractors that didn't know what they doing. Chances are that the vehicle you drive has MIM connecting rods. They take more abuse in one hour than a weapon does in a lifetime.