Fat Boy
Member
I was examining a S&W 686 plus this evening in the local shop- I want to confirm something is a problem or nothing-
With the crane open, (cylinder swung out), I noticed that the ejector "star" (I think that is the correct term) seemed to be a bit mis-aligned in reference to the chambers of the cylinder. I pushed slightly on the star and it moved around and back in line. I then pushed the ejector rod to move the star up out of the cylinder. Holding it there, I was able to "wiggle" the star back and forth. The movement wasn't extreme, but the star and ejector rod seemed to be loose on the cylinder. I checked another Smith in the case, I believe a 386pd and found the same thing, so I am thinking this is not uncommon?
I came home and checked my old Colt "Army Special" revolver; no play was noted.
Is this common on new guns? Only on Smith guns? Would this concern you if you were thinking of buying this 686 plus?
Thanks for you expertise!
With the crane open, (cylinder swung out), I noticed that the ejector "star" (I think that is the correct term) seemed to be a bit mis-aligned in reference to the chambers of the cylinder. I pushed slightly on the star and it moved around and back in line. I then pushed the ejector rod to move the star up out of the cylinder. Holding it there, I was able to "wiggle" the star back and forth. The movement wasn't extreme, but the star and ejector rod seemed to be loose on the cylinder. I checked another Smith in the case, I believe a 386pd and found the same thing, so I am thinking this is not uncommon?
I came home and checked my old Colt "Army Special" revolver; no play was noted.
Is this common on new guns? Only on Smith guns? Would this concern you if you were thinking of buying this 686 plus?
Thanks for you expertise!