71velle
Member
Cool, thanks sounds like I need some but glad to hear dry fire is ok with out.
I have had the Tiptons separate brass from plastic. I now only use Azoom's for class training. Never had any problems, thousands of loading/unloading demos.
They are smarter about the steel they use in gun making. It's not as hard so, it rebounds better. Sure, snap caps are cheap insurance. You just don't need them.And how come with the modern guns its ok to dry fire them without it causing damage to the fire pin? And wouldn't the snap caps just be a cheap like insurance policy compared to just dry firing your gun?
This is generally true, but some rim fire guns can be dry fired without damage. The Ruger Mark I, II and III for example. They have a firing pin block that stops the firing pin before it contacts the chamber rim. It's OK to dry fire those.I agree with most of what has been said. But, do not dry fire if you use rim fire ammo. The pin will hit hard steel.
This is partly true. Guns from days gone by were made from high carbon steel. This made them more brittle. So, the hammer coming in contact with the frame, without the primer absorbing some energy, would crack the hammer or frame or both.If your ammo is center fired the pin or striker hits nothing, so no damage.
...................This is generally true, but some rim fire guns can be dry fired without damage. The Ruger Mark I, II and III for example. They have a firing pin block that stops the firing pin before it contacts the chamber rim. It's OK to dry fire those.....................