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Dry firing a .22 rimfire
I hear all sorts of bad things about the practice. I searched the owners manual and it’s silent on the topic.
I was thinking; take a 10/22. Every magazine ends with a dry fire - no? You don’t know you’re empty. Isn’t that the case with most rimfire? The slide doesn’t lock back on the last shot. Even a bolt action, you can easily dry fire. A revolver? You could lose count.
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Racer
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(the shotguns)
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Maryland
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A good question. I’ve heard this as well and never felt like it made a lot of sense.
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Racer
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Read the link.....
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Good question and posted article reply. Even a 1000 dry fires won't hurt functionality but there is evidence of usual wear.
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?
Join Date: Apr 2002
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Just something I've always avoided with a fixed pin hammer like a revolver....but "dry firing" to me is on an empty cylinder, not an already fired one...non-issue. On a semi like a 1911, I always dry fire after removing mag & checkng...to release hammer...non-issue either imo.
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Double Trouble
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: North of Pittsburgh
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Mostly wives tale. I have never seen a firing pin damaged from specifically dry firing. Older shotgun firing pins yes as they tend to work harden over time and firing them without a snap cap "can" result in the tip of the pin breaking from the body. Seen it a bunch of times.
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Registered
Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 225
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Put some Kidd parts in the 10 22 if you're concerned about dry fire damage.
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Quote:
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We have an old Remington Model 514 that may or may not have some damage on the barrel from dry firing. Then again, it needs some extractor/ejector work also so who knows what it has been through. All the pump rimfires must not have an issue since they get dry fired a lot as well.
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Registered ConfUser
Join Date: Aug 2006
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Have put about 400 rounds through this 22 so far and the slide locks back at the end of each magazine. The manual does not discourage dry firing. Just FYI.
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Join Date: Sep 2007
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I have a S&W 15/22. The instruction manual that came with it states "Never dry-fire the rifle as damage to the firearm could result".
I don't think you could never dry fire the rifle. Hopefully, the occasional dry fire won't damage it. |
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Join Date: Mar 2003
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Yes, some older 22s will suffer busted firing pins, peened breech faces, etc. with *excessive* dry firing.
That said, many firearm manuals will tell you that their system is designed to not have it be an issue ever - the Ruger 10/22 is like this. Dry fire away. If you have an older 22 and don't know if it will be an issue, dry wall anchors are cheap and make great snapcaps |
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