Majorlk
Member
All I was doing is quoting the manual. Remember I said, "for what it's worth...."
I've dryfired my many times, too....
Which then begs the question, "What other things in the manual are OK to ignore?"
The "recommended" and "not recommended" ammo lists. They were compiled based, most likely, on customer reports when the 15-22 was having out of battery discharges, which was something like five years ago and has long since been fixed. The majority of today's .22 LR ammo isn't listed on either list.
Out of three rifles and four handguns, only ONE has any actual danger of being damaged by dry-firing. That one is a 1963 manufactured High Standard match pistol. Even in that one, the firing pin just barely touches the breechface. It was used for several years by a member of the Army Marksmanship Unit and he said he dry-fired it at least 500 times a month - he put something like 60k rounds through it before I bought it from him. I've put probably 25k through it, as well as a few thousand dry-fires, and it still put 10 rounds through a quarter-sized hole at 25 yards from a machine rest. BTW, the trigger pull is a measured 14 ounces!