I was shooting my 340PD and the front fell off.
This story started in early April and I held off posting anything about so S&W would have a chance to resolve the issue, but I feel like I may get the shaft on this.

The little strip of metal you see in some of the pics is a piece they put in the top of the frame above the forcing cone to prevent flame cutting the top strap. I didn't lose it because it was held in by the cylinder until I opened it.







Now, for some details.
My dad and I both had 340PD revolvers and we changed the batteries in our CT grips. We adjusted the lasers to match point of aim at about 12 yards, and then went shooting to make final adjustments. My first shot missed a a 2'x3' cardboard backer at about 15 yards. Since I didn't see a hole in the paper I checked the bore and it was clear.
I moved up to about 7 yards and tried again. This time the bullet hit about a foot low. The next shot I used the sights instead of the laser and hit about a foot high. I was wondering if I'd suddenly developed a serious flinch and decided to fire the last two rounds and see what would happen.
On round number four I saw something falling in my peripheral vision. I was shooting under a cedar tree and sometimes chips of bark will fall so I didn't think much of it until I noticed that I no longer had a front sight. At that point I noticed I had a problem.
The ammo was Remington Golden Saber 125gr .357 magnum, which is a mid-range load. My chronograph says it runs just under 1100fps from that little revolver. I've never fired a full power .357 magnum round through it since the Golden Sabers seem to be about my limit for shooting well with it. The gun probably has about 300 rounds through it. I haven't kept a log but in a range session I typically shoot 10 rounds of Golden Sabers through it followed by 10 or 20 rounds of whatever .38 Special standard or +P I can find. I do that two or three times per year and I've had it a while. I think the date on the CT grips is 03/2007.
After collecting all the pieces we could find my dad zeroed his 340 and we each fired about 20 or so rounds of .38+P through it before moving on to something more enjoyable.
When we go home searched the web and found that these scandium framed revolvers break a lot more often than I thought.
Here are a few links and some have pics very similar to mine.
http://www.smithandwessonforums.com/forum/s-w-revolvers-1945-present/19197-340-sc-goes-kaboom.htmlhttp://www.thegunzone.com/sw340pd.htmlhttp://lonelymachines.org/2009/11/08/pushing-the-envelope-vs-pushing-your-luck/#more-1478http://www.thegunzone.com/sw357pd.htmlhttp://smith-wessonforum.com/s-w-revolvers-1980-present/186384-340pd-cracked-frame.htmlI like these pics:


Those look a lot like the remains of my 340.
After looking at those links and others we checked out my dad's 340 and sure enough it had a crack under the forcing cone, where the barrel attaches to the frame.
We both called S&W. The person I spoke with immediately offered to send me a shipping label for Fedex. The first person my dad spoke with on the phone told him that he would have to pay for the shipping to S&W for them to look at it. He called back and spoke with someone else who immediately offered him the shipping label as well.
My dad's 340 arrived at S&W on April 9 and mine arrived on April 10. On April 11 he got a phone call from S&W saying they would replace his revolver and wanted to know what dealer to ship it to. I didn't hear from S&W for about 8 business days so I called them and was told that my 340 was "in the metallurgy lab" and the person I spoke with would not give me any more details. However, that made me suspicious.
Today, May 3, I called S&W again. I was told that the 340 was still in the metallurgy lab and that "it appeared to be a detonation". I was told this by the guy on the phone and presumably not someone in "the metallurgy lab". I was also told it would be another two to three weeks before I would hear from them.
Does that look like a detonation?
The cylinder and barrel are fine. Neither is bulged or split. The ammo was factory rounds and not really hot ones, either.
Here is a link to a revolver that had a detonation:
http://www.vincelewis.net/44magboom.htmlNotice how nearly half of the cylinder is gone?
I was not injured at all and didn't notice any difference in recoil on any of the four rounds I fired that day.
Seriously, does that look like a detonation? If S&W isn't trying to use "hot handloads" as an excuse to not replace it then why have they spent three weeks on this when they took two days to let my dad know they were replacing his 340?
I noticed one symptom mentioned in one of the articles and that is that over the last few months the cylinder would sometimes bind a little when I would try to open it. I had assumed that it was dirt and lint from carry getting into the mechanism, but I think that might have been from some slight misalignment when it started to crack.
I also wanted to add that S&W has not refused to replace it. They have had it for 20 business days without getting in contact with me. I have called them twice and not really gotten an answer except that one person I spoke with told me it looked like a detonation and seemed to hint that S&W was not going to do anything about it. That guy, named Joe, may not have the final word on this but right now it doesn't look good.
If you have a scandium alloy S&W then I suggest you check it carefully in the area around the forcing cone.