What are you trading for it? I own one. As well as two others I know. Mine did not like when shot left handed for some reason. The trigger pull for mine is long. Heavier pull than some higher priced guns. And the pull is gritty but that is an easy fix. Easy to field strip. And it is decently accurate.
Positives: Low price (got mine new for $285 at the Fort Wayne gun show). / Very similar to a Glock / 14 round mags / Accurate / I've shot almost 500 rounds out of it without any problems or jamming / Excellent S&W customer service
Negatives: Heavy trigger pull (for safety reasons and can be altered) / Plastic sights
I have a friend who just bought one at the 1500. He bought it due to the price, and easy trigger pull. He has arthritis bad in his trigger finger andshoots his Sigma better than anything else he owns. I'm not sure where the long hard trigger stories are coming from as it seemed easy to me.
My Son bought one-For the price point..$275.00=Could not ever get over the trigger=Sold it for $250.00+bought a Beretta 92FS===LOVES THE 92.
A good friend bought one NEW for $299.00=Six months later the trigger pin fell out-jammed up the gun-WITH a loaded round in the chamber=Took a hammer to the gun to cycle slide to remove loaded round...Sent back to S&W for repair-3 weeks turn around from Smith..shoots fine now (IF you can call their trigger FINE??), but for how long???
I own 6-8 different Mfg. of hand guns--NO S&W Sigma...THIS will not change for me...Bill.
For the price it is a pretty good gun. All of the experience I have with the Sigma pistols is positive as far as reliability goes. The trigger is not great, but I know several people that don't mind it. If you have shot one and liked it then I say go for it (depending on what you will be giving up in the trade).
I owned one. They are OK for a Glock copy cat gun but extremely rough and unrefined compared to the Glock. The trigger is like dragging an anchor over a field of boulders. The "rail" fits no lights I know of (I know someone must fit it but I do not know which). For another $150 bucks you can get a little used Glock 19. Save your money, IMO. BTW< I am a big S&W fan but NOT of this gun.
I have no problems with mine. Very accurate, feeds anything I put in it. Bought mine because I wanted a 40 S&W to play with and the price was good. Very happy with it.
Think I'm going to pass on the Sigma have seen several reviews with the same trigger problem Back to saving my money and get something with a better track record
Thanks for all the info and I'm glad some have had great luck its like me and my Lorcin its junk but have had no issues with it. it was my first hand gun had to start some ware
I was issued two, first generation models. Had what I call catastrophic failures with each.
The first was after four days at the range. It wasn't shot that much at all, maybe 200ish rounds a day, if that. On day #4 just as we were ending the day, I noticed that on slide reset, the slide seemed off. I didn't really pay attention, being new to guns, because it was firing and I was able to reset it by hand in the proper place (I know better now). Gave it to a co-worker after we were doing firing and he dry fired it while pointing it at the ground. The slide just fell off, onto the ground. Range instructor took it with him and had to use a dental pick to clean it. What had happened was that enough dirt or whatever had gathered under the barrel and above the slide lock piece. As it gathered even more, the stuff pushed down on the piece causing the slide not to be held in place.
Second failure was with my replacement. Front sight was crocked, causing some issues with my sight picture. Pointed this out to the range instructor who tried to fix it by turning it. It broke off.
After that second failure, I got an HK-USP Compact and may have had one failure over many years of carrying that gun.
I heard the recent models of Sigmas aren't too bad. Many report reliable functionality, but 90% report a hatred for the trigger. The trigger never bothered me, maybe because it was really the first handgun I actually shot tons of ammo through. I guess if you are trained on the worse, everything else is easy to get used to.
Other failures with the first gens I saw: Another front sight issue, two strikers break.
Sigmas do have crap triggers in stock form, but there are very simple and free remedies. I have the .40 and it's a great shooter- reliable and accurate. I've read bad reviews on them too, but supposedly the problems were only present on early models.
I've had my sigma .40 for about a year now. Put about 500 rounds through it with no problems. I lightened my trigger up a bit with a 10 min mod. It's not the most accurate but for the price you can't beat it
I've had one in 9mm for 3 years. I like it. It goes bang every time I pull the trigger. Very reliable for the money. The trigger isn't great, but it is manageable. I like carrying cheap and reliable guns because if I ever have to use one, I won't mind it getting ruined in the investigation. Thats why I don't carry my 1911.
I have handled a sigma and fired one as well they are not to bad. They look and feel cheap but they arent bad guns. If i were to buy one i would probablu just throw it in a box as part of a emergency kit. I wouldnt have one as an EDC.
Ive had mine for about 2 years and its ok, but thats about it imo. I dont lile the grip, i think its too thick and wide, i put a grooved hogue on it and that helped a bit., but obviously made it even bigger. Dont lime the trigger as some have said. Its a good keep in your console unit but thats about it for me.
I just bought one Saturday and after removing the pigtail spring and polishing out the tool marks on the sear, I am really liking the gun. Out of the box it was dead on accurate with the LRN reloads I bought at the gun show.