Smith & Wesson's M&P: what do yall think?

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I just took my wifes new 40c to the range last night. Wow. And I say "wow" as a Glock fan.

At 7 to 10 yards I was shooting the tighest, overlapping groups of my life. My shooting buddy did the same and we were both impressed with the almost non-existant recoil for a compact in .40.

I only had time for about 50 rounds so I wouldn't call it a true test, however, the early results are positive.
 
IMO the M&P is currently the best of the polymer pistols. My MP40 won't replace my HiPower or my 1911s. I'm planning on a MP9c sometime soon though and that may very well replace everything else.
 
I like the feel of the M&P, but the full size is too big to carry and the compact is too small. I need one that is "just right" :)
 
I can't wait for the M&P45c to come out. I have a M&P9c and it is great but my wife kinda stole it from me.
I am either buying another 9c or the new 45c.

The M&P40c and M&P9c both have a very tame recoil but I went with the 9c because it has a tad less muzzle flip and the ammo was much cheaper.
A good friend of mine bought the M&P40c and really likes it.
 
1st, welcome to the collective :D

As for polyguns...I have my fill, so I'm not really in the market for another. That said, I have been really impressed w/ the M&P - nice ergos, good fit & function & the few I've tried -- 9mm & 45 acp -- have been nice shooters. Plus, at the price, they seem like good values too :cool:
 
First of all I would like to thank all of you for your advice and responses.

I have heard so much good about the M&P, I am truely impressed with this pistol line. So far the consensus here is that it is a very unique and very nice gun and I really cant wait to get mine. Right now for the next couple of months S&W is running a Promotional Offer of either $30 Back or 2 free mags. I am going to try to get a 9mm M&P with the 2 free clips hopefully in the next Month or so. After hearing everyones response I am psyched up about this gun.

Also I have heard so many pros and the only true con that I have seen so far is that the trigger takes a few hundred rounds to break in. Anyone have any other cons that they would like to share? I am really not minding if you are nitpicking I want a full rundown of any negative experiences you have had with this line of pistols.

Once again thank you for the response. This forum has just become my new favorite hangout. I enjoy speaking and talking with like minded individuals and this forum seems to have some nice and intelligent people that seem incredibly knowledgeable.
 
I love the feel of the grips on my wife's full-size M&P-9. Nice bumpy texture that feels very secure. Between that and the interchangeable backstraps, it's a good choice. Also, you can't go wrong with 17+1.

I would (and did) go for the XD, but I love them both.
 
I have the midsized .45 model that was mentioned above. My only complaint is that it sucks away all of my money. After buying the gun, holster, ammo, cleaning stuff, eye and ear protection I just don't have enough for the Crimson Trace laser grips. Definitely worth it though.
 
I love my M&P45 - drawbacks are manual safety is easy to move on/off/on, and there is a lot of sideplay twixt slide and frame, making it a less than optimum "point-shoot" tool.
b-
 
I have both a S&W915 9mm and a 1911 .45acp

I was surprised to find the recoil differences were negligible. I think you both would do well to go to a range and rent some guns as you never know till you try it. Just remember that with practice your aim will improve and shooting will relax rather than increase your heart rate. Happy shooting!
 
I like my M&P.

About the only things wrong with it from a design design standpoint are some minor control layout issues, and the striker design. I'd file these under teething issues of a new design, and they have mostly been addressed.

If you have long thumbs and a good, high grip, your odds of interfering with the slide release is fairly high. This won't be an issue for most people, and can be fixed with a little practice, or a file.

If you have a low grip and poor recoil control, you can hit the mag release. S&W has attempted to address this by making the mag release stiffer (I think with changed geometry on the mag catch internals rather than changing the spring rate).

THe original striker was an L-shaped deal and would break with dry firing. The current version is a J-shaped unit with relief cuts near the front. I'd still use snap caps for dryfire practice.


Everything else wrong with it has been a matter of quality control.

There were a bad batch of front sights that would move when they shouldn't.

There was a bad batch where the melonite process had too many slides going throguh the bath, and thus you were getting slides treated with a weak solution. The result was it accelerated rusting when it shouldn't.

There was a batch of mag catches that were improperly hardened that would start failing and droppign mags free.

There was a bad batch of 9mm extractors. They seemed to be cut not quite right.

These all seem to have been addressed thoroughly.

However, it seems that whenever S&W gets a large order for something, QC seems to slide. However S&W customer service is good, and they will make it right if you get something that looks like it was made on a monday or a friday.

The vast majority of them work fine and are accurate.
 
Its a fantastic gun! Here's a pic of my son taking Gold at the Sunshine State Games...he did it twice with the M&P40. Over 8k rounds without a failure, jam or misfire...pretty cool if you ask me. We had the slide hard chromed and a Burwell trigger job which is amazing. Its a very popular gun to shoot in uspsa, most shooting the 9mm.

2SunshineState07TimStg1.jpg
 
I recently purchased an M&P9c and I love it! I have owned a Glock 19 and currently have an XD45c, so I can form some sort of comparison, although my XD is a larger caliber. The M&P is jam up. The recoil is minimal, making for easy target reacquisition. I do not have many rounds through it, but it has performed flawlessly so far. I went and shot IDPA for the first time last weekend and used it without problem. The accuracy is outstanding. To me, the ergonomics are also a major factor. It feels great in my hand. The interchangeable back straps help with that. I checked out compact Glocks and XDs when I was looking to purchase, but the M&P just felt better.
 
If you like the ergonomics, it's a fantastic gun. I've had no issues or failures in my M&P .40 in 1200-1500 rounds, and I don't even clean it that thoroughly. I'm in the minority, however, in that none of the backstraps really feel right in my hand so I have to death grip mine so that it doesn't slide around. I'm actually using a Hogue slip on now, but will probably have it stippled or something in the future.
 
NovaTiger none of the backstraps really feel right in my hand so I have to death grip mine so that it doesn't slide around. I'm actually using a Hogue slip on now, but will probably have it stippled or something in the future.

Something you might try is to wrap it in Hockey tape...you can use as much or as little as you need and it produces a really nice grip.
 
Babalouie

What trigger job did you have done the standard, or the competition?

I just bought a M&P 9mm last week and used it to compete in my second ever USPSA match. The fun only had 225 rounds through it when I started the match. So I wasn't expecting great things, since I really wasn't even used to the gun. But I managed to stay within 1% of my first overall score that I achieved using a Steyr S9 that I had been shooting for a while. I did have one stove pipe, but I'm just going to chalk that up to break-in.

I'll have to say that the trigger on my M&P is among the best trigger I've felt of it's kind. That being said, I am planning on sending it to Burwell at some point to lighten it up. I think at that point it would almost feel like a single action.
 
I had the standard trigger done on it. I wanted to be able to carry it if my son decided he wanted to shoot something different. Some of the club guys have the Burwell competition trigger and those triggers are just about as close to single action as you can get. Don't get me wrong, the standard trigger is amazing at 3.5lbs with the shortend reset. Either one you chose you won't be disappointed. Dan is a great guy to deal with.
 
now that I think about it, I am very intrigued by the .45 midsize. Is it just a M&P45 with a shorter slide/barrel, or is the grip shorter as well?
 
I had an MP 9 full size for awhile. Out of the box it shot 8 inches low at 15yds. I sent it in to S&W who were real nice about it and placed a different front sight on the gun to fix the problem. My confidence was a bit shaken but I continued to take it out and get more comfortable with it. Then after 700-800 rounds it started jamming on round nose ammo. I clean after every range trip so it wasn't dirty. It jammed with different mags 5 times with factory ammo within about 100 rounds. From the MP Forum I discovered this has happened with some other MPs. I was shooting my first competition in a couple weeks and I panicked and got rid of the MP.

I traded it in on an XD Service 9mm. That long trigger reset is taking a bit of getting used to. I don't know, I could see myself giving the MP another chance down the road. I think mine may have had a few more problems than most.
 
Rob1035 now that I think about it, I am very intrigued by the .45 midsize. Is it just a M&P45 with a shorter slide/barrel, or is the grip shorter as well?

It is a M&P45 with a shorter slide and barrel. It still has the full size frame and uses 10 round mags. There is a compact coming out soon that has the same slide/barrel length as the midsize but shorter grip that uses 8 round mags.

I love my 45 midsize.
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