Dry Fire a Model 41, 22LR OK, or Not OK

ctkenc

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Nothing mentioned in the Owners Manual and searches on the web produce inconsistent and contradictory answers .... is it OK, or NOT OK, to Dry Fire practice (without snap caps etc.) with a new S&W Model 41 .22LR?
Thanks
 
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not OK

my general policy is never to dry fire without snapcaps any .22 (or other rimfire) weapon, rifle, pistol, revolver, because the firing pin is going to strike the edge of the chamber, could chip it, could break firing pin, or at least stress the daylights out of both. Now sometimes when my lever action rifles run out of ammo 'n I wasn't counting, it will happen, try not to to get to A/C about it, but try not to do it. And most snapcaps I have found don't hold up too well. And using empty brass can be criticized as a bad habit, too easy to mix up with live rounds, and landing on the same dimple every time is not being that easiy on the firing pin.
that's my general policy, with my reasons, others may differ.
 
I make it a practice NOT to dry fire my guns. My learning lesson came (luckily) a long time ago. I had my Grandfather's (*!t .32 ACP out in my youth for some plinking fun. I tried dry firing it for some unkown reason and watched part of the firing pin sail down range. Luckily I had a buddy that could make a Corvette out of 3 bottlecaps and some bailing wire and he turned down a hardened screw driver shaft and made a replacement for me.

With a revolver, if I don't have snap caps and I wish to experience trigger pull or hammer drop, I merely place my left thumb in between the hammer and the frame and let it drop on my thumb.

Not sure what S&W recommends regarding the model 41, but I make it a practice to never dry fire.
 
From S&W website FAQs:


Q: Can I dry fire my Smith & Wesson?

A: Yes, except for the .22 caliber pistols which includes models 22A, 22S, 422, 2206, 2214, 2213 and 41.

.22 caliber revolvers such as models 17, 43, 63, 317 and 617 also should not be dry fired.

Q: Why can't I dry fire my .22 pistol or revolver?

A: Dry firing a S&W .22 pistol or revolver will cause damage to the firing pin.



Given this, I still dry fire when asked to in competitions. No damage so far.
 
Q: Why can't I dry fire my .22 pistol or revolver?

A: Dry firing a S&W .22 pistol or revolver will cause damage to the firing pin.

It can also put a firing pin mark in the barrel, intruding slightly into the chamber.
Making an allready somewhat picky eater, one that would rather starve...
 
Thanks

Thanks Guys,
I got the message ... No, No. No.
I appreciate your help with this and will follow your recommendations.
 
Is there another way to de-cock the hammer after shooting?:confused:
 
Is there another way to de-cock the hammer after shooting?:confused:
When I finish cleaning a 41 after a shoot, I insert an empty magazine and pull back the slide 1/16th" or so and pull the trigger. The hammer will fall but the firing pin will not reach the rear barrel face or the shell rim recess.
 
I decock the hammer on my 41 and 422 using a spent .22 casing as a snap-cap. I'll put a slightly-unbent mini-paperclip in it to make placing it in the chamber easier, and I usually mark the casing with a permanent marker to distinguish it from a live-looking round. I also use it for light-duty dry fire practice, tossing the casing after a few dry fires.
 
Pachmayr makes plastic snap caps for 22 lr (see below). While there are others, these are the same size as a .22 round and are made as snap-caps.
I put one in an empty magazine and load it after shooting/cleaning so that I can lower the hammer. Dry fire with one loaded is ok IMO, but you need to keep cycling the caps thru so you do not hit the same place on the rim repeatedly.
I have been instructed to always load from the magazine because the extractor does not pick-up the round from the same angle if loaded manually.
Pachmayr&reg Pachmayr your primary source for quality handgun grips and recoil pads
 
Is there another way to de-cock the hammer after shooting?:confused:

If the match strictly follows USPSA rules you are required to dryfire the handgun in a safe direction in a manner such that if it were loaded, it would fire.

I've dryfired my 41 and High Standards dozens, if not hundreds of times, and they are just fine. One of the High Standards had a small firing pin ding protruding into the chamber when I got it. I marked the ding with a Sharpie, dryfired, and found that the firing pin was not making significant contact. I shortened the firing pin a small amount, repaired the ding, and have had no problems with the gun.
 
Like alot of the other posters. All of my rimfire single action hammers are dropped on a spent case.
 
Has anyone come up with a workable method to dry fire a 41 continuously without damage? I am a competitive shooter that live fires 15,000 rounds a year and proper practice involves hundreds of dry fires per week. If you load a spent cartridge or snap cap, it is not only time consuming but it gets ejected when you cycle the slide to reset. One of my 41's has a faulty ejector which is good because I can recycle without manual ejection (it cycles fine under power) but then the same dimple gets mashed until the round gets stuck in the chamber. Is there something flattish that can be inserted in front of the closing slide each cycle or that would even stay put? In the absence of any other solution the only thing that I have come up with is loading magazines with dummy aluminum rounds and catching them on ejection. I don't know if thousands of cycles and strikes with those will damage the firing pin or chamber?

Thanks,

George
 
you can use plastic #4 wall anchors as inexpensive snap caps. Get a whole box full for a buck or two or three. The yellow ones.
 
you can use plastic #4 wall anchors as inexpensive snap caps. Get a whole box full for a buck or two or three. The yellow ones.

Does the ejector pull these out when you cycle the action? If not how many strikes do you get?
 
Does the ejector pull these out when you cycle the action? If not how many strikes do you get?

I believe it will, although I have not tried it with a 41.

One strike and you would have to rotate it, this is soft plastic.
 
I agree with never dry firing any rimfire gun period for the reasons already listed. We don't need damge from stupidity. These guns cost way too much mney to be treated that way also.
 

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