Got my P365 Tuesday. Put 60 rounds through it n Friday, and today after 5 rounds. No more bang. Take the gun apart, and the trigger swing freely. Now have to wait until Monday to talk with Sig. Has anyone else had similar problem.This message has been edited. Last edited by: Bible David, May 19, 2018 04:20 PM
May 19, 2018, 02:01 PM
ARMT Guy
I still need to get mine out to the range and start trying it out.
What's the manufacture date on yours?
"Also I heard the voice of the Lord saying who shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, here am I, send me."
May 19, 2018, 02:09 PM
Bible David
Manufacturing date 4/27/2018.
May 19, 2018, 02:44 PM
tyu
Waiting on mine to come back from Sig for the same/similar thing. My post was here:
Originally posted by Bible David: Manufacturing date 4/27/2018.
Ugh... that's the same date mine was made.
Oh well, I guess we'll see what happens once I start shooting it.
SIG will take care of you and get your 365 squared up.
Please clean it up before sending it back to SIG, though. At my last job, we hated receiving dirty, ( and I mean DIRTY ) warranty return guns from customers. It basically told us that customer didn't truly care about/for their firearm.
In addition, it takes more time for that person in the warranty department to resolve the issue since they sometimes need to clean the firearm, ( at least the portion in question/needing repair ) to inspect it properly. The more time taken on a given firearm, the longer it takes for them to get to the next person's warranty return gun.
"Also I heard the voice of the Lord saying who shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, here am I, send me."
May 19, 2018, 04:19 PM
Bible David
quote:
Originally posted by tyu: Waiting on mine to come back from Sig for the same/similar thing. My post was here:
The same thing. Just it was a dis-appointment with a great shooting gun. Just make sure your thumb is not close to the slide stop lever or the slide will not stay back after the last round.
May 19, 2018, 04:26 PM
gjgalligan
quote:
Originally posted by ARMT Guy:
quote:
Originally posted by Bible David: Manufacturing date 4/27/2018.
Please clean it up before sending it back to SIG, though. At my last job, we hated receiving dirty, ( and I mean DIRTY ) warranty return guns from customers. It basically told us that customer didn't truly care about/for their firearm.
If I had a gun that broke at less than a month old I would be too pissed off to clean it before sending it in.
Integrity is doing the right thing, even when nobody is looking.
May 19, 2018, 05:29 PM
deadmanmike
I’ve seen this issue before with a new gun, the trigger spring kept popping off. After a few tries, I flipped the spring around and re-installed it. Gun has worked ever since.
Originally posted by Bible David: Manufacturing date 4/27/2018.
Please clean it up before sending it back to SIG, though. At my last job, we hated receiving dirty, ( and I mean DIRTY ) warranty return guns from customers. It basically told us that customer didn't truly care about/for their firearm.
If I had a gun that broke at less than a month old I would be too pissed off to clean it before sending it in.
The disappointment is readily understandable, however the point I'm trying to make is that by not cleaning it before sending it back, it tends to slow the process down some and delays everyone else in line from getting their firearm back in a more timely manner.
An individual could say to themselves, 'fuck SIG, ( or whatever gun company it might be, ) they better just fix my shit, make it better than it was before and get it back to me like yesterday!'
In all actuality, that person isn't fucking SIG, ( or whichever company ) but instead, are fucking over fellow firearms owners who have, ( or are about to have, ) their guns in the warranty shop and now will be waiting longer.
"Also I heard the voice of the Lord saying who shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, here am I, send me."
May 19, 2018, 07:31 PM
RHINOWSO
quote:
Originally posted by ARMT Guy: The disappointment is readily understandable, however the point I'm trying to make is that by not cleaning it before sending it back, it tends to slow the process down some and delays everyone else in line from getting their firearm back in a more timely manner.
An individual could say to themselves, 'fuck SIG, ( or whatever gun company it might be, ) they better just fix my shit, make it better than it was before and get it back to me like yesterday!'
In all actuality, that person isn't fucking SIG, ( or whichever company ) but instead, are fucking over fellow firearms owners who have, ( or are about to have, ) their guns in the warranty shop and now will be waiting longer.
Do you wash your car before taking it in for service?
May 19, 2018, 08:14 PM
ARMT Guy
quote:
Originally posted by RHINOWSO:
quote:
Originally posted by ARMT Guy: The disappointment is readily understandable, however the point I'm trying to make is that by not cleaning it before sending it back, it tends to slow the process down some and delays everyone else in line from getting their firearm back in a more timely manner.
An individual could say to themselves, 'fuck SIG, ( or whatever gun company it might be, ) they better just fix my shit, make it better than it was before and get it back to me like yesterday!'
In all actuality, that person isn't fucking SIG, ( or whichever company ) but instead, are fucking over fellow firearms owners who have, ( or are about to have, ) their guns in the warranty shop and now will be waiting longer.
Do you wash your car before taking it in for service?
Nope, but I don't take it out mud boggin' before getting the oil changed, either.
"Also I heard the voice of the Lord saying who shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, here am I, send me."
May 19, 2018, 08:15 PM
pm9
[/QUOTE]Do you wash your car before taking it in for service?[/QUOTE] Yes
May 19, 2018, 08:23 PM
black1970
Hadn't had a trigger break on any of mine. But I only have Smith's, Rugers, Glocks and West German Sigs. I have been chastised on this forum for speaking out somewhat of the less than stellar quality of some of the later offerings of some firearms manufacturers. But a broken trigger on a new gun? Give me a break. Pun intended.
May 19, 2018, 08:24 PM
testfire
I actually have washed my car before taking it in for service. That way the if they use the fender covers when they are working on it, dirt underneath will not scratch the paint.
And sorry about your new gun breaking - that would frustrate me as well. Hopefully you get it back shortly better than new.
May 19, 2018, 08:28 PM
soggy_spinout
quote:
Manufacturing date 4/27/2018.
That explains it...a Friday gun.
May 19, 2018, 10:00 PM
beltfed21
Three hundred totally trouble free rounds through mine thus far (knock on wood).
******************************************** "On the other side of fear you will always find freedom"
May 20, 2018, 06:20 AM
P226RN
quote:
Originally posted by ARMT Guy:
quote:
Originally posted by Bible David: Manufacturing date 4/27/2018.
Ugh... that's the same date mine was made.
Oh well, I guess we'll see what happens once I start shooting it.
SIG will take care of you and get your 365 squared up.
Please clean it up before sending it back to SIG, though. At my last job, we hated receiving dirty, ( and I mean DIRTY ) warranty return guns from customers. It basically told us that customer didn't truly care about/for their firearm.
In addition, it takes more time for that person in the warranty department to resolve the issue since they sometimes need to clean the firearm, ( at least the portion in question/needing repair ) to inspect it properly. The more time taken on a given firearm, the longer it takes for them to get to the next person's warranty return gun.
I always have cleaned my guns thoroughly before sending in for repairs. I would love it if they came back the same way but they never do. So it kinda goes both ways.
If it won't matter in 5 years don't give it more than 5 minutes.
May 20, 2018, 08:37 AM
Dusty78
quote:
Originally posted by ARMT Guy:
quote:
Originally posted by gjgalligan:
quote:
Originally posted by ARMT Guy:
quote:
Originally posted by Bible David: Manufacturing date 4/27/2018.
Please clean it up before sending it back to SIG, though. At my last job, we hated receiving dirty, ( and I mean DIRTY ) warranty return guns from customers. It basically told us that customer didn't truly care about/for their firearm.
If I had a gun that broke at less than a month old I would be too pissed off to clean it before sending it in.
The disappointment is readily understandable, however the point I'm trying to make is that by not cleaning it before sending it back, it tends to slow the process down some and delays everyone else in line from getting their firearm back in a more timely manner.
An individual could say to themselves, 'fuck SIG, ( or whatever gun company it might be, ) they better just fix my shit, make it better than it was before and get it back to me like yesterday!'
In all actuality, that person isn't fucking SIG, ( or whichever company ) but instead, are fucking over fellow firearms owners who have, ( or are about to have, ) their guns in the warranty shop and now will be waiting longer.
I don’t think 60 rounds dirties up a gun enough that it needs to be cleaned to work on. Unless he’s shooting Brown bear or some equally dirty ammo.
_______________________________________________ Use thumb-size bullets to create fist-size holes.
May 20, 2018, 09:28 AM
ARMT Guy
quote:
Originally posted by P226RN:
quote:
Originally posted by ARMT Guy:
quote:
Originally posted by Bible David: Manufacturing date 4/27/2018.
Ugh... that's the same date mine was made.
Oh well, I guess we'll see what happens once I start shooting it.
SIG will take care of you and get your 365 squared up.
Please clean it up before sending it back to SIG, though. At my last job, we hated receiving dirty, ( and I mean DIRTY ) warranty return guns from customers. It basically told us that customer didn't truly care about/for their firearm.
In addition, it takes more time for that person in the warranty department to resolve the issue since they sometimes need to clean the firearm, ( at least the portion in question/needing repair ) to inspect it properly. The more time taken on a given firearm, the longer it takes for them to get to the next person's warranty return gun.
I always have cleaned my guns thoroughly before sending in for repairs. I would love it if they came back the same way but they never do. So it kinda goes both ways.
I agree, but once again, it becomes a time factor plus, if management saw you doing uneeded, ( in their eyes ) post-firing cleaning of a customer's firearm, something would usually be said.
"Also I heard the voice of the Lord saying who shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, here am I, send me."
May 20, 2018, 09:29 AM
Malysh
Who cares whether the pistol is cleaned before the owner sends it for repair? And really, I wouldn't give a **** what the company thinks about it or me.
The original poster has a new pistol with a failed trigger! First the company has problems with the P320 ( and yes, I cleaned mine before I sent it in for the upgrade so I'm a good little boy, whoopie!), now this model, which I had been thinking of buying
What an asinine thread drift! Thank you Dear Abby, for your gun shipping etiquette lesson.