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Update 1/23/2019 - Here's a timeline of what I do know to have transpired:
June 2018 - HR-D slide announced. Hudson, Mfg. intended for it to be manufactured at Hudson's facilities, not outsourced. The supplier of the original slides thought they were going to also make the HR-D slides. When the supplier found for the H9 found out that they were not going to be making the new HR-D or H9A slides they cut ties with Hudson Mfg. and began focusing on tooling up for other projects from other customers. This left Hudson Mfg. with no new slides coming in to meet production. Around roughly the same time grip modules were being made by another supplier and due to tolerance stacking the firearms were not functional. Several from this batch made it out to distributors and into customer hands, which resulted in warranty repair claims. After it was discovered that there were issues, units stopped shipping. Hudson Mfg. continued to place orders for grips with no design revisions. Warranty repairs were coming in as more inoperable grip modules were being delivered from the parts supplier.
September 2018 - By this time there are no parts left to do repairs. Warranty repairs were cannibalized from any source they could acquire parts from, including personal firearms of employees. Slide producer was no longer delivering slides for new firearms. Grip maker was producing grips with tolerance stacking issues. Over $1M in PO's sat unfulfilled due to supply issues. Hudson Mfg. started looking for a buyer or investors based on outstanding PO's but no one would assist due to it being a firearms related business.
Hudson Mfg. had considered licensing the H9 design to resolve cash flow issues with someone else handling the manufacturing processes but up until last known of the situation, has not been successful in this endeavor. Everyone in manufacturing was laid off back in September. The person that answered the emails and the voicemails has long since been released.
At the end Hudson went for several months unable to fulfill their PO's in hand, no inventory, no one left in manufacturing, a pile of warranty returns and no parts with which to fix them and also no one to do the work. The facility has been empty for some time. Their booth at SHOT Show 2019 was paid for in advance and they didn't appear in that booth this week.
Roughly 8-9000 H9's were ever made. Hudson operated on a no-inventory model (on hand), so there's nothing left of production guns at the factory. 300 threaded barrels were made. These have all sold. 100 HR-D slides were made and as of the end of September roughly 1/3rd of them had sold. There are only 4 prototypes of the H9A in existence. The HR-D slide is a modified H9A slide design.
1/23/2019: Posthumous RIP for Hudson, Mfg. You will be missed.