MichaelWells Posted November 17, 2020 Report Posted November 17, 2020 I have been using center fire designs for months. But I don’t have any idea about rimfires Recently I came to know that when we do dry fire in a rimfire rifles it ill affect the gun’s performance because of its brittle firing pins. If we do so how many rounds of dryfire will it take to affect the gun. Or is there any Gun Customization tricks to make it more reliable
98Z5V Posted November 17, 2020 Report Posted November 17, 2020 Go rip the Intro Section up, and tell us about yourself. Here's a link to it: https://forum.308ar.com/forum/22-introductions/
COBrien Posted November 17, 2020 Report Posted November 17, 2020 I don't know what specific rimfire you're referring to, but if you're talking about a Ruger (of any type, as far as I know), it is safe to dry-fire them. Says so in the manual. Other manufacturers, though? You'd have to ask them.
dextron Posted December 2, 2020 Report Posted December 2, 2020 why does your font look like the text is copy and paste?, could you give us an answer
98Z5V Posted December 3, 2020 Report Posted December 3, 2020 He made his one post on Nov 16th, same day he joined, and hasn't been back since...
Armed Eye Doc Posted December 3, 2020 Report Posted December 3, 2020 I searched for his entire post with Google. He spread his message around further than Covid after Sturgis.
Belt Fed Posted December 3, 2020 Report Posted December 3, 2020 Probably a spammer since a lot of sites make you post a couple times before you can post a link.
mrmackc Posted December 3, 2020 Report Posted December 3, 2020 On 11/17/2020 at 12:06 AM, MichaelWells said: I have been using center fire designs for months. But I don’t have any idea about rimfires Recently I came to know that when we do dry fire in a rimfire rifles it ill affect the gun’s performance because of its brittle firing pins. If we do so how many rounds of dryfire will it take to affect the gun. Or is there any Gun Customization tricks to make it more reliable He said ......"I have been using center fire designs for months." Hey guys you gotta start somewhere, sometime. Welcome to the big time!
Cunuckgaucho Posted December 4, 2020 Report Posted December 4, 2020 I'm more interested to know why rimfires by design end up with brittle firing pins vs centrefire rifles
shooterrex Posted December 4, 2020 Report Posted December 4, 2020 (edited) The firing pin hits on the edge of the shell in rimfire. The firing pin is also hitting the edge of the chamber. That's what breaks firing pins on rimfire guns. It can also mess up the edge of the chamber where the rounds will get hung up and not chamber all the way. Edited December 4, 2020 by shooterrex
Belt Fed Posted December 4, 2020 Report Posted December 4, 2020 2 hours ago, shooterrex said: The firing pin hits on the edge of the shell in rimfire. The firing pin is also hitting the edge of the chamber. That's what breaks firing pins on rimfire guns. It can also mess up the edge of the chamber where the rounds will get hung up and not chamber all the way. This here^^^^^^^^
micmacman Posted October 9, 2021 Report Posted October 9, 2021 On 12/4/2020 at 1:12 AM, shooterrex said: The firing pin hits on the edge of the shell in rimfire. The firing pin is also hitting the edge of the chamber. That's what breaks firing pins on rimfire guns. It can also mess up the edge of the chamber where the rounds will get hung up and not chamber all the way. you know what , after all the years , thats the one explanation ive herd regarding this that actually explains why
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