BuckeyeChuck
Member
Rastoff provided material from a guy who could actually do the (relatively simple) math for the position-velocity-acceleration expressions that are first-quarter material for any physics student whose course is based in differential math.
Some of the physics pontification up to this contribution was laughable for the obvious flaw in all of it: failure to identify that the acceleration in question occurs when the pistol hits something solid, not when it is dropped or thrown. Obviously your arm cannot exert 25g on a pistol to throw it, and obviously it won't experience 25g while accelerating in freefall. And just as obviously, these observations while correct are completely irrelevant.
It's apparent what's happened here: some posters who actually understand the simple physics involved assumed that everybody understood that the inertia safety is designed to prevent accidental discharge *when the gun stops*. Apparently, this is a bad assumption so a straightforward statement may clear up the issue:
The M&P Shield's inertia safety is present to prevent the trigger from discharging the gun by experiencing sufficient force due to deceleration if the gun hits something and decelerates rapidly.
The assertion that a pistol trigger can't experience 25g of acceleration when the gun collides with a hard surface after being dropped even from a height of one meter is laugh-out-loud ridiculous. This strikes me as the guy at the local car show who is sure that if he just keeps adding gears to his car, he could drive 250 MPH. Or the guy who knows that if you just put wind turbines all around a car, you could capture all the energy of the car's motion and put it back into the car so that it wouldn't burn any gas once it's up to speed. Or (and this one is one of my favorites) the guy who positively knows that covering an airliner with solar cells would greatly reduce the amount of fuel consumed by the airliner.
Thankfully somebody making some basic assumptions showed just how ridiculous is the notion that the trigger can't ever see that kind of acceleration.
I'll be checking my new-to-me Shield when I get home. Despite the errant pontifications in this thread, I want to be sure my gun will not fire when dropped because the physics say it can happen.
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