Sig is reporting a very small number because unfortunately the vast majority of people who buy a P365 are very unlikely to shoot it allot in order to ever experience these types of failures. Much like my P938 after 1,500 rounds it went wonky and Sig had to replace darn near every part in the lower.
Yeah, my wife's P938 had to go back almost immediately due to the mag catch not working correctly and the mag would drop while shooting. When I called Sig they were like, "Oh yeah, that happens, we'll RMA it no problem". So glad I paid ~$700 for a gun with known issues...
Did they give you any indication how many weeks that might be?
C’mon man, everything Sig has produced in the past few years has been Beta’d by the sycophants that love SIG. The 290/“Oh we fixed it”290RS, 2022, 320, 365, MCX, MPX, shall I go on? With Cohen at the wheel, you’re going to get Beta guns until they get it right! Oh, I left out the 938, my bad, and a few others. Follow these numbers, 220, 225, 226, 228, 229, 230.Literally the exact same thing happened to mine. IMHO the P938 is a POS after that debacle
If you look back over the years, you'll find problems reported with just about every gun manufactured. Since the internet every Tom, Dick and Harry been able to complain about the problems to the masses. I've had no problems with the only Sig I've ever owned, P 320. I only have about 1,500+ rounds through it though.C’mon man, everything Sig has produced in the past few years has been Beta’d by the sycophants that love SIG. The 290/“Oh we fixed it”290RS, 2022, 320, 365, MCX, MPX, shall I go on? With Cohen at the wheel, you’re going to get Beta guns until they get it right! Oh, I left out the 938, my bad, and a few others. Follow these numbers, 220, 225, 226, 228, 229, 230.
Sorry...slow on the return.
9 to 12 weeks but I also said I was in no hurry.
If you look back over the years, you'll find problems reported with just about every gun manufactured.
This is, unfortunately, true. The marketplace got crowded and manufacturers are rushing to ship the next new hotness. H&K and Beretta seem to be largely immune, Glock next up but still with roll out hiccups, and Sig has had more than their share. The only Sig I've had issue with at low round count was one of the "new" long extractor models, it had to go back for a new extractor within 5k rounds. Short extractors, 40k+ with no issues. I've broken small parts from use (decocker, front sight insert), but with recoil spring changes and routine maintenance I've never had a failure that puts the gun down with short extractor "Classic" Sigs in any caliber.
Ruger bit me in the ass, and that was the last gun I've bought in the first two years of it's existence. I'll let others beta test.
Germans tend to be more tedious and OCD about their mechanics.
A little off topic, but way back when a buddy of mine had a Volvo. He was always complaining about it. I asked him why he kept it. He said the only reason he kept it was so when people would fawn over it, he could tell them that it was the worst car he'd ever owned and a real lemon! BTW, American engineering got us to the moon and back. I think today, the emphasis on profit has taken precedence over quality. That and so much sub-contracting to the lowest bidder has put the durability of some parts in question. IMHO (and I'm not smart enough to be an engineer) it isn't the engineering that is the problem. Many pistols have been engineered well, but substandard parts will make a great design look terrible. QC needs to rise from the ashes. Some of these countries where parts are sub-contracted aren't the most ethical (by western standards) and the quality of basic materials is also questionable. Companies need to do like President Reagan said..."Trust but verify!"
Sorry....I've got a friend who owns a BMW. Seems like German engineering isn't always the bee's knees.
Nice write up! I am not yet ready to give up my CM9 as my EDC. But maybe next year the Sig 365 will be problem free and my new EDC.
Dang; I am no expert but that is a lot of striker drag. Never seen anything that severe. One, maybe two, of the three, look like the striker drug the primer right to the case.
Is this typical of what the other INGO P365 owners are seeing?
All this assuming the P365 is the top pic of spent cases...
Yes, the bottom brass is from my Sig P 320 for comparison.Good luck. It's an interesting little gun if they get it sorted.
I'm guessing the top photo is of the brass from the 365?