Post
by stork » Wed Nov 16, 2011 10:27 am
Mountain Man,
Having never had a 41 I can't speak from personal experience. However, the armorer that builds my 45's and tweeks my Rugers, has owned and has worked on a lot of them. So my info comes from his sharing of knowledge of them, and my buddy that shoots BE with me that owns one.
In the 70's they were a very problematic semi auto. My smith tweeked, called S&W, visited with other smiths and finally gave up. His would not go through the 22 stage of a 2700 (90 shots) without malfunctioning. The smiths at S&W were not sympathetic to his problems and basically let him know that he was expecting too much out of such a fine target 22, to go 90 rounds without a malfunction. He ran into a 41 collector in a local gun store & was giving him an account of his malfuntions when the guy looked at him and said he had over a dozen 41's and not one of them would go even 50 rounds without a malfunction and what was he complaining about, my smith sold his that week and went back to his HS Citation and Rugers.
Watch out for those 41's made while Bangor Punta owned S&W.
Now on to more current 41's. My BE buddy has one that I do not know the era of its build (I think late 90's-early 2000s), but as long as he feeds it CCI SV, Eley brown box, or Federal 711 it runs great. If he feeds it anything else, jam-o-matic.
Moral of the story, if its a used one I'd make sure the owner was ok with me running at least 500 (five-hundred) rounds through it to thoroughly test its reliability. If it's a good one, grab it. If not, pass it by because it will cause you to pull out your hair, go prematurely grey, advance the onset of male pattern baldness, develop jitters, become surly and uncommunicative, the family dog will cower and run when you come back from the range,,, and then it starts getting really bad.
You get my drift.
Last edited by
stork on Sat Nov 26, 2011 10:32 am, edited 1 time in total.
"A free people ought not only to be armed and disciplined, but they should have sufficient arms and ammunition to maintain a status of independence from any who might attempt to abuse them, which would include their own government.” – George Washington