"De-Cocking"?

Jedi Knife

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Hi All,

I just bought one of these jewels today. This is my first post, so it is a pleasure to be here and please forgive my lack of any other formal introductions (yet). So I read in the manual not to dry fire the 15-22 (p.13 at the top), but now my question is how do I decock this sucker? The best case scenario I can imagine for this is that it works like a striker type mechanism where pulling the trigger "cocks" and fires during the pull but I don't see it being like that. The only other thing I can figure is that it will have to remain under spring tension until it is fired (which could be some loooong intervals). Please forgive my ignorance but any help with this would be much appreciated!

Thanks!
JK
 
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I've always popped the rear pin on mine, swung the upper away from the lower and pulled the trigger while holding the hammer so I can let it down slowly. Then, I swing the upper back into position and pop the rear pin back into place.
 
:) Welcome to the forum JK. Your post was not stupid. You should never dry fire a 22 rim fire on any gun. Follow the previous post and you will be OK. Also watch all the videos at the top of the forum page. You can learn a lot. Don
 
(After you check that the rifle is empty) Just pull back on the charging handle a quarter inch or so and pull the trigger.
 
I put a piece of paper or a cotton bud in front of the closed bolt and pull the trigger.
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I've always popped the rear pin on mine, swung the upper away from the lower and pulled the trigger while holding the hammer so I can let it down slowly. Then, I swing the upper back into position and pop the rear pin back into place.

What he said ^, just takes a couple of seconds
 
Just pull the trigger and dry fire it. Dry firing does not do the damage everyone thinks it does. Target shooters dry fire their guns tens of thousands of times wihtout any ill effects.
 
Just pull the trigger and dry fire it. Dry firing does not do the damage everyone thinks it does. Target shooters dry fire their guns tens of thousands of times wihtout any ill effects.

Yes and they also replace parts and barrels all the time too...

S&W states Twice in the owners manual NOT to dry fire.
 
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I pull the bolt open and lower it slowly while pulling the trigger, it doesn't even snap follows the bolt down ,easy on parts;)
 
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Just pull the trigger and dry fire it. Dry firing does not do the damage everyone thinks it does. Target shooters dry fire their guns tens of thousands of times wihtout any ill effects.

maybe on a centerfire, i dont know of any of my friends that dry fire their rimfires, and i certainly dont.
 
Hey thanks everyone for your replies. I have also sent an email to S&W customer service via their website to see what they have to say about it. I just can't help to think that it would be better to leave a spring in an decompressed state as opposed to leaving it compressed. Thanks again!
 
Dry Firing a Rim Fire without something in the chamber to block the firing pin, is a sure-fire way to nick the chamber wall.

And once you nick the chamber wall you've started to decrease the inside diameter of the chamber mouth through the continued peening action of the firing pin hitting the mouth. I learned this the hard way, please don't you do the same.
 
And once you nick the chamber wall you've started to decrease the inside diameter of the chamber mouth through the continued peening action of the firing pin hitting the mouth. I learned this the hard way, please don't you do the same.

OK, sorry to hear about your learning experience. I've always been very cautious with rimfires due to the nature of the firing mechanism because I was afraid of something like this!
 
AS for the instruction book I believe that every centerfire gun I ever had said not to shoot reloads in it either! I dry fire my guns WAY more than I run ammo through them and have never had an issue. The other question is why worry about de-cocking a 15-22 anyway? Maybe a fine rifle that will be stored for a couple years but on a AR even if the spring does weaken, which is doubtful, you can buy a new spring for a couple bucks.
 
AS for the instruction book I believe that every centerfire gun I ever had said not to shoot reloads in it either! I dry fire my guns WAY more than I run ammo through them and have never had an issue. The other question is why worry about de-cocking a 15-22 anyway? Maybe a fine rifle that will be stored for a couple years but on a AR even if the spring does weaken, which is doubtful, you can buy a new spring for a couple bucks.

Why spend 8 dollars on springs if you just decock it for storage? Just because springs are cheap, doesn't mean you should fatigue a set during long term storage, when you could have easily decocked the rifle.

I shoot mine frequently enough that I don't worry about it. But if it was going to be on the shelf for a year, I'd relax the hammer.
 
well considering the hammer spring is 30 times to much anyway i wouldnt worry about leaving it cocked
 
Why would you want to decock it?

+1 on this. Springs don't weaken from being compressed. I have several semi-autos that I have owned for years. They have been stored between usages in a cocked position. Never a problem to date.

Regarding dry firing: It is commonly known that dry firing a rimfire can result in damage to the barrel face where the firing pin impacts it. Not so with a centerfire. Even then however it is best to use a snap cap when dry firing.
 
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