S&W told me that if the recoil spring has a coil or two go limp, and the spring won't stay installed when you put the slide on the frame, just assemble the gun up-side-down and it'll work.
Um ... no thanks.
S&W told me that if the recoil spring has a coil or two go limp, and the spring won't stay installed when you put the slide on the frame, just assemble the gun up-side-down and it'll work.
Um ... no thanks.
I wonder if it really is armorers that answer the e-mails.
Haven't called to talk with anyone there yet. I am new to the M&P, and have two pistols, so the round count is not piling up real fast on either. Eventually, I will call and hope to get a knowledgeable person on the phone.
Necro-posting, but I had a few follow-up questions and the information in this thread has good shelf life so why start another.
When we say "5,000 rounds" are we talking 5,000 trigger presses, or 5,000 rounds fired?
Is there a way to be more specific about which parts to replace at separate "Trigger Pulls" and "Rounds Fired" intervals?
My thinking is that things like the:
- Trigger return spring
- Striker spring
- Sear plunger spring
- Striker block spring
Should be replaced at "X Trigger Pulls"
But the recoil spring, which doesn't absorb much energy during dry-fire, could wait until 5,000 rounds fired.
Am I off the mark with this?
M&P 9 maintenance schedule I received in my armorers course says @ 5000 replace coil pins, replace mag spring & follower (that 5000 rounds per magazine or one year continuously loaded), and to replace slide stop. The recoil spring assembly is suggested to be replaced @ 7500. Then @ 10,000 rounds replace slide stop and the trigger bar assembly.
-Trigger return spring isnt noted on my list but I'd probably be changing it out @ 5000
-Striker spring assembly: 20000 (or 3000 dry cycles for part # 391860000...reading on into it it shows a part # of 393790000 being replaced @ 30,000)
-Replace striker block, spring, & spacer: 25,000
-replace sear housing block: 40,000
Thanks for the great info...but are the round counts given for "trigger presses" or actual rounds fired? That's where my concern is. My ratio of dry:live fire is about 2:1, meaning I've got twice as many dry trigger presses as live rounds fired.
Dry firing stress some components, but not others.
So how does that affect the maintenance schedule?
Dry cycles = trigger presses in my book. It mentions the trigger sping @ 10,000 rounds along with replacing the trigger bar. It says to "inspect sear, striker, barrel, recoil spring, slide stop, trigger bar, magazine catch, and slide and frame components for excessive wear" as well as "check lower trigger for proper function" and to "check slide lock with magazine for open lock engagement" after 300 rounds...then again at 2500, then at intervals of 2500 along with the other items listed.
This schedule is for normal practice and daily use service.
You're over thinking it. Count the actual rounds and be done with it. If it breaks before then, adjust for your specific circumstances and replace sooner next time.
The only thing that's ever broken in my M&P's is an Apex trigger return spring. Replace those every 2000 rounds.
"Specialization is for insects." -Robert A. Heinlein