Just about every major manufacturer has had at least one. Some won't call it a recall. You hear about something euphemistically called a service bulletin that basically say "if you have one of these, stop using it and send it back to us." Surprisingly just about every recall says the same thing. Some companies with large LE contracts have tried to keep it quiet while they service LE customers while others issue full-blown ads through every gun magazine, on their website, and any official channel available.
Some examples come to mind: Glock (2 things I remember most - one was a service upgrade, the other was a frame "advisory"). S&W had a recall on N-frame stainless .44s some 20 years ago that has recently gotten some attention. Seems some 624s and 629s had a bad batch of cylinders (far as I know, they found very few guns that were actually affected and they settled accounts with the owners very nicely). Ruger's Blackhawk, Single-six "recall" wasn't really a recall. They were upgrading the guns to the newer transfer bar system. Nothing really wrong with the old system as long as you use due diligence (load 5 and keep the hammer down on an empty chamber - standard safe carry condition for SAA revolvers). Taurus had problems with Millenium edition gun (they absolutely refused to label it a recall, but they also replaced the frame if it cracked).