Thanks for the responses guys. I'm physically okay, couple pieces of shrapnel in my face but nothing serious. My suspicions are squib load. The fact that it blew the handle apart tells me the pressure from the round couldn't escape down the barrel. And they were lightly loaded hand loads, which screws the warranty pooch no matter what. Sucks cause it's only 4 months old.
I may go Glock now, Police ordinance has an individual officer sale program and it's under $500 for a g17 if I remember right.
If I'm scrapping it do I have to do any paperwork to legally destroy it? Physically it's taken care of...
I blew the cylinder off a revolver once
Follow up on the story of the exploding M&P 9, Smith and Wesson warranty centre in Canada is transferring ownership is a new frame to me and destroying the other one.
Follow up on the story of the exploding M&P 9, Smith and Wesson warranty centre in Canada is transferring ownership is a new frame to me and destroying the other one.
Follow up on the story of the exploding M&P 9, Smith and Wesson warranty centre in Canada is transferring ownership is a new frame to me and destroying the other one.
"i think you're hooped buddy" must be some kind of canadianism.
There is a video on YouTube about an incident that sounds very similar to what happened to you. The fella in the video said he had a bit of a hassle dealing with S&W and their warranty if I remember right. Hopefully this isn't becoming a trend with these guns.
Nothing to do with the gun, you wedge a bullet in the barrel and then fire another one, ANY gun will respond negatively - regardless of who made it. And since when did 2 guns become a trend?
Regardless of the quality of ammo, a gun must be designed to NOT fire out off battery. It's claerly the gun that is faulty here.



























