



But perhaps of interest
This is important. 

No1Mk3 wrote:I have used hard rubber glued into the primer pockets with great success, other people I know have used hot melt glue and replaced it when it gets too battered. I did try a nylon plug but it didn't last very long.

womble wrote:No1Mk3 wrote:I have used hard rubber glued into the primer pockets with great success, other people I know have used hot melt glue and replaced it when it gets too battered. I did try a nylon plug but it didn't last very long.
Here he goes again.
In my day we used hard rubber and we used to walk 50 miles in the snow to school and we ate gravel for breakfast and if we complained we’d get beaten with a tyre iron you young people with your fancy pants spring loaded snap cap primers


fnq22 wrote:Mate, a quick email to the manufacturer of the specific firearm you intend dry firing would be the route I'd take first..
If its a rimfire then dont do it because of the obvious....the firing pin strikes the edge of the cartridge and of course if there is no brass there then it may hit the front edge of the chamber face which will possibly damage both the pin and chamber if done "x" amount of times..
But generally because the firing pin of a centrefire will basically just be hitting fresh air then its pretty much accepted that modern centrefire firearms are safe to dry fire..
I grew up with the mantra of never pull the trigger on an empty chamber because it will will damage the gun....but no one actually was able to explain why and I never thought to ask why...?
These day almost every competative handgun shooter of Centrefires,dryfires, and those that are very good shooters will have done thousands possibly 10's or 100's of thousands of pressing the cocked trigger with no ammo or snap caps with no adverse effects...its an extremely vital aspect of becoming a consistently accurate shooter..
I broke the firing pin in my Win 94 dry firing. Made a new one out of silver steel and then made some snap caps. Haven't had an issue with other firearms, rifle or handgun. Have repaired firing pins for others but most of them had worn holes in the bolt face which was most likely the contributing factor.
So rip in Bro and become one with the nuances of your trigger press....






