This makes no sense to me what so ever, Here is your easy button out and you say no...
It's a principle thing.
This makes no sense to me what so ever, Here is your easy button out and you say no...
If you were offered a full refund, I can't imagine why you would decline.
S&W did warranty work on my M&P 9 and I told that I shoot reloads and I even included the case that went boom. My experience is that S&W stand behind their well used products. I'm sorry that you situation is different.
500 rounds in a session with a revolver like that sure seems like it is pushing the envelope, I usually shoot 50 to 75 with my 686. I guess that I'm a light weight!
I'm taking notes about the "ethical" guys in this thread who would sell a gun, and after the buyer blows it up with his handloads, would compensate him with no questions asked.
And I do respect them for making the offer, whoever the warranty centre that dismissed the claim without ever even seeing the gun, not so much.
What it comes down to is that this particular gun simply was not strong enough for the use that it got and that I think S&W knew that and never expected anyone to actually use one of these safe queens this hard.
Well your position is that the gun is defective or simply not designed and built well enough for its intended use and you can't prove that, I'm sure that S&W have and could. You are stating that the ammo used in the gun was made by you and that it was not defective and that it was not the cause of this failure and you can't prove that either.
If you shoot this gun as much as you say that you do, what is your maintenance program? Can you prove that this gun was in good working condition and properly maintained by a qualified person?
I understand that you have a ruined gun here but you also have a retailer who offered you an olive branch.
I'm not sure what "principle" you are referring to but the logical path forward seems very clear to me anyways. Of course it's not my gun.
I presume the crack on the side plate happened the same time as the failure on the barrel/frame?
I am a senior structural engineer and have some experience in steel failure. Looking at the 3rd photo, showing the piece that split of. It is difficult to be sure from a photo but there are some dark patches on the right side of the fracture. Generally speaking light patched indicate a fresh break. The metal has not had a chance to start corroding yet. Dark patches tend to indicate a preexisting flaw in the metal where the metal is not fully homogenious. That is a weak patch. As I say it is difficult to say from one photo but that is what it looks like to me. Weaknesses of this sort tend to fail after repeated loading. The flaw acts as a stress raiser and tends to make it easier for cracks to form
Sadly S and W has something of a reputation for not have adequate quality control and poor customer service. The required test for gun is +P loading plus 30%. There is no way a correctly loaded round should cause this type of failure ever no matter how many rounds are fired. I have double charged a 45ACP cartridge (yes I know stupid but I have changed my procedures to prevent this happening again) in my Ruger which effectively ended up at test load level. There was no damage to the gun what so ever and I have subsequently fired 1000's of round through this gun with no problem.
My conclusion, probably a production flaw in the barrel but sadly being S and W I doubt you will get anywhere.
I ride motorcycles. I ride them at the track. The bikes that I ride at the track are ridden with the knob at 8 to 10 most of the time. I do not expect for one moment that my track bikes will hold out as long as my street bikes which are not ridden as hard. Same for your gun I'd think. I do not consider the reduced usable life of my trackbikes to be a manufacturing problem at all. My approach...
Perhaps you have done this but did you first reach out to S&W in the US? I did and they got me a case number and then directed the activity at MC in BC. Perhaps this may be an avenue to explore if you haven't gone this route already.
Best of luck.
Sorry but it is beyond me why you would a) decline a refund and then b) decide to buy another S&W while c) continuing to rag on S&W; which I am sure you are planning to use in the same fashion as the first one and would be expecting a different result which is the classic definition of insanity.
23.8 grains of Hodgdon H-110
That is a hot load by anyone's definition. I agree that it is within posted limits but still a big thump everytime...if there were any flaws in metal or manufacturing, this would bring it out.
Glad to hear you are OK.
I ride motorcycles. I ride them at the track. The bikes that I ride at the track are ridden with the knob at 8 to 10 most of the time. I do not expect for one moment that my track bikes will hold out as long as my street bikes which are not ridden as hard. Same for your gun I'd think. I do not consider the reduced usable life of my trackbikes to be a manufacturing problem at all. My approach...
Perhaps you have done this but did you first reach out to S&W in the US? I did and they got me a case number and then directed the activity at MC in BC. Perhaps this may be an avenue to explore if you haven't gone this route already.
Best of luck.
S&W did warranty work on my M&P 9 and I told that I shoot reloads and I even included the case that went boom. My experience is that S&W stand behind their well used products. I'm sorry that you situation is different.
500 rounds in a session with a revolver like that sure seems like it is pushing the envelope, I usually shoot 50 to 75 with my 686. I guess that I'm a light weight!



























