Please, no more loctite threads.
For most things that go "Boom" or "Bang" and are mass produced, loctite IMO is required. I always use it on things that I don't ever want to shoot lose, such as back-up sights/sights, grips, stock bolts, etc.)
Using loctite should not be seen as a sign of a bad part or poor quality.
For instance, this past week I put 75 slugs through my shotgun... the stock came loose (no loctite), It's a Fabarm. Does it suck? Is it terrible quality? No. Perhaps it wasn't torqued properly at the factory. Either way, I did put some loctite on the stock bolt and I don't expect that bolt to ever shoot loose again.
Bad quality or craftmanship to me are revealed in poorly made parts, ill-fitting parts, visible tooling/machining or worse, hammer marks. Seeing a drop of loctite on a thread is definitely not an indicator of crappy or cheap IMO.
Jeeze, I believe all high-end 1911's all have red loctite on the trigger-stop set screws (from the factory). Are they all crap too?
In the world of racing, let's say motorcycle racing, there is something called "safety wiring" that is done regardless of make. Why would they do that? Is it because every motorcycle make in the world is of poor quality and out of spec? I dunno... I have a hunch that in addition to keeping pieces together in a crash, perhaps it's been discovered that vibration and heat/cooling cycles might actually, cause bolts to "possibly" loosen over time? Anyone disagree with that?