hdtwice
Member
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2017
- Messages
- 103
- Reaction score
- 74
Hi everyone,
Being a newbie on guns I have a question on the safety of my shield 9mm.
For some perspective, when I handle my revolver, I never think twice about setting it down a certain way, being overly gentle, or even think about what if scenarios.
However, I notice with my semi auto I always wonder if set down to hard, will it go off. OR, if dropped will it go off. The logical side of me says I am being a bit paranoid but I think it's because I don't fully understand the mechanism inside the gun and how it works.
With a revolver, you can see the hammer move back, and then it has to go forward to cause the gun to fire (if not cocked in singe action)
But with the striker fired semi auto, in my mind when the gun is loaded and hot with a round in the chamber, I think of something internally holding back the striker just waiting for the release kinda of like a kids rubber band gun where it is stretched back and just waiting for the trigger to be moved.
So, can someone help this newbie out and kinda of paint me a picture of how the internals work so that it is safe when bumped, or dropped.
Thanks.
Being a newbie on guns I have a question on the safety of my shield 9mm.
For some perspective, when I handle my revolver, I never think twice about setting it down a certain way, being overly gentle, or even think about what if scenarios.
However, I notice with my semi auto I always wonder if set down to hard, will it go off. OR, if dropped will it go off. The logical side of me says I am being a bit paranoid but I think it's because I don't fully understand the mechanism inside the gun and how it works.
With a revolver, you can see the hammer move back, and then it has to go forward to cause the gun to fire (if not cocked in singe action)
But with the striker fired semi auto, in my mind when the gun is loaded and hot with a round in the chamber, I think of something internally holding back the striker just waiting for the release kinda of like a kids rubber band gun where it is stretched back and just waiting for the trigger to be moved.
So, can someone help this newbie out and kinda of paint me a picture of how the internals work so that it is safe when bumped, or dropped.
Thanks.