The S&W lock issue just won't go
away.
Monday, July 19, 2010 Filed in:
Revolvers, Self
defense
Several people emailed me about The Firearm Blog's picture of Jerry Miculek's
627PC. It would appear that his gun
has had the locking mechanism disabled, leading to much renewed
discussion about the incidence of accidental lock activation.
When the locks first came out there were a few reported cases of
locks self-engaging. The wisdom of the internet held that the locks
were just fine, that S&W would never knowingly introduce
something that would put people at risk, that the reports were
fabricated, and so on.
As time wore on it became apparent that the issue was real, but
seemed to mostly happen with lightweight guns shooting heavy
recoiling loads. Then I started getting reports of lightweight guns
shooting normal loads experiencing the problem, followed by the
"big boomers" and hunting loads. Most recently I've heard
first-person accounts of steel guns (all J-frames, so far) shooting
sane cartridges having their locks self-engage.
I've collected enough of these accounts over the last several years
that I simply won't carry a S&W with a lock. The incidents are
numerous enough, and the consequences dire enough, that I simply
don't trust the mechanism. I recommend that all my clients
seriously consider carrying a non-lock gun; if you tuned in last
week you found that my usual carry revolver was a Ruger, partly
because they don’t have such a mechanism.
(Just for the record: I have no financial stake in this debate, as
liability issues demand that I do not deactivate a safety device -
no matter how questionable - from a gun. I'm not making any money
by suggesting that you carry a S&W sans lock.)
-=[
Grant ]=-
Tags: s&w, safety, bloggers