I was a S&W fan. My service revolver was a 686. Never had a bit of trouble with it, except for having a bit of cylinder end play taken out of it, in 10 years and tens of thousands of rounds of factory .357 Mag ammo. We did not use .38 Specials, even to practice or qualify. I have a Mountain Gun, an original '60's Centennial, a Model 60, a K frame .22 (model escapes me at the moment - gettting old), one of the alloy frame .22 autos (2206?), a Model 29, a 4516, my old 686, and a 4506 that I used in IPSC matches for five years and has had about 15,000 rounds thru it, give or take a few hundred. I've traded away a Model 27, a Model 28 Highway Patrolman, and one of the newer polymer framed 9mm's, can't remember the model, that I picked up at a gun show for my wife and sold because it wouldn't feed - anything.
That is thiry five years of experience with S&W. The local gun shop that I frequent has ordered two revolvers, I don't remember the model #'s, for regular customers in the last couple of months that would not function out of the box. Another came in with a big scratch across the sideplate, another about a year ago came in without a rear sight blade. IN MY OPINION, that is poor quality.
I was not speculating on the future of T/C. My comment was about what the effect of the S&W management, that is letting revolvers out the door that will not shoot - out of the box, will have on T/C products. T/C products have always been of the highest quality. Hopefully, they will stay that way.