NewToGuns17
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I have cleaned all 3 of my shield mags and my 2 2.0 full size mags once. Question. Is it proper to drop a mag to the ground no matter the surface? Doesn't it beat it up?
I have cleaned all 3 of my shield mags and my 2 2.0 full size mags once. Question. Is it proper to drop a mag to the ground no matter the surface? Doesn't it beat it up?
If you are a defensive shooter, meaning practicing because you're going to carry for self-defense, then yes, always drop empty mags to the ground. You want to develop the habit of removing the empty mag as fast as possible so you can get a full one installed.Question. Is it proper to drop a mag to the ground no matter the surface? Doesn't it beat it up?
This is a good way to keep your equipment. However, during an emergency reload, you really need to drop the empty mag.I don't clean mine, but I try not to drop them, either.
I suppose that could happen, but I haven't seen it in tens of thousands of mag drops. Mags don't usually start spinning when they leave the mag well. They usually fall straight down. If you're moving as you change mags, and you should be, there's a possibility the mags will get kicked though.Just use caution dropping mags on hard surfaces with several rounds still in them...if you don't have weighted bases installed. Could mangle up your feedlips.
This is an interesting point about what's important. Most shooters put a huge emphasis on cleaning the bore. So much so, that most equate cleaning a gun with scrubbing the bore. I don't believe that's the correct place to put the emphasis on cleaning a gun.I think that if the only thing a person does is clean the bore from time to time then from the standpoint of function that will usually be enough for many, many rounds of normal use. Of course it won't run indefinitely but it will for quite a while.
I thought you just threw them out after you ran out of bullets.
Rep. Diana DeGette Doesn't Understand High-Capacity Magazines Can Be Reloaded - YouTube
I suppose that could happen, but I haven't seen it in tens of thousands of mag drops. Mags don't usually start spinning when they leave the mag well. They usually fall straight down. If you're moving as you change mags, and you should be, there's a possibility the mags will get kicked though.
This is an interesting point about what's important. Most shooters put a huge emphasis on cleaning the bore. So much so, that most equate cleaning a gun with scrubbing the bore. I don't believe that's the correct place to put the emphasis on cleaning a gun.
The bore has nothing to do with the function of the gun. When talking about defensive shooting or even USPSA, IDPA or Steel Challenge, the function is more important that super precision accuracy. So, more attention should be paid to cleaning the action than the bore. I clean my guns every time I shoot, but I only clean the bore every 500-1,000 rounds or so.
Since we're in the pistol section, this is only about pistols. I treat rifles differently. Shotguns, I don't care about the bore much at all.
I *think* the point he was trying to make was that if your gun doesn't function properly, it has no accuracy. If it doesn't function, you have not gun. The bore does need to be clean, but the action is what needs to function properly for a clean bore to do it's job.It has always been my understanding that if the bore gets fouled then accuracy suffers...especially rifles at distance but pistols, too.
NewToGuns17 is exactly correct.I *think* the point he was trying to make was that if your gun doesn't function properly, it has no accuracy. If it doesn't function, you have not gun. The bore does need to be clean, but the action is what needs to function properly for a clean bore to do it's job.It has always been my understanding that if the bore gets fouled then accuracy suffers...especially rifles at distance but pistols, too.