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  • #16
    negolien
    Veteran Member
    • Sep 2010
    • 4829

    LOL

    Originally posted by thedonger
    Hey John Doe I'd like to introduce you to my new Girl Friend....
    Soooo having manners is a bad thing in your world?
    "Men sleep peacefully in their beds at night because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf."

    George Orwell

    http://www.AnySoldier.com

    Comment

    • #17
      rayron56
      Junior Member
      • Apr 2013
      • 10

      Talked to an HK gunsmith and he said it will be a little bit of wear & tear on the springs but not to worry about it.
      Thank you all for your responses.

      Comment

      • #18
        calif 15-22
        CGN/CGSSA Contributor
        CGN Contributor
        • Jan 2012
        • 5921

        Hate to tell you but if you bought that gun in a gun store, it probably was dry fired 50+ times.
        Originally posted by Citadelgrad87
        It's one thing to question everything . . . It's entirely another thing to reject simple, rational explanations in favor of ever more fantastic and far reaching explanations because you've decided the government cannot be trusted.
        Originally posted by Hoooper
        Anyone who says the American dream requires a specific pay range doesn't understand the meaning of the American dream
        sigpic

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        • #19
          stilly
          I need a LIFE!!
          • Jul 2009
          • 10685

          Originally posted by rayron56
          Hi all, I have a new HK P2000, I was showing it to my father in law so I cleared the firearm & handed it to him to take a look at it. He immediately started to dry fire it about 5 times as DA which made me cringe. Aside from a safety aspect what are your thoughts on dry firing it. I always prefer for somebody who is checking out my pistols to not dry fire them, am I being overly cautious? Again it's an HK P2000 V3. Thanks for the input.
          Invest in some A-Zoom snap caps and next time hand it to him with a snap cap in it. Let him dry fire away all he wants to.

          I think dry fire really only bugs the 22lr though.
          7 Billion people on the planet. They aint ALL gonna astronauts. Some will get hit by trains...

          Need GOOD SS pins to clean your brass? Try the new and improved model...



          And remember- 99.9% of the lawyers ruin it for the other .1%...

          Comment

          • #20
            Mail Clerk
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2008
            • 2324

            Originally posted by rayron56
            Hi all, I have a new HK P2000, I was showing it to my father in law so I cleared the firearm & handed it to him to take a look at it. He immediately started to dry fire it about 5 times as DA which made me cringe. Aside from a safety aspect what are your thoughts on dry firing it. I always prefer for somebody who is checking out my pistols to not dry fire them, am I being overly cautious? Again it's an HK P2000 V3. Thanks for the input.
            rayron56,

            Generally speaking I never dry fire my firearms unless it's absolutley necessary. Many pistols not have firing pin blocks so if you do it by accident your pin is safe from breakage. I wouldn't do it as a habit though!!

            Five times by your father in law your fine/OK but don't so it as a habit though

            Mail Clerk

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            • #21
              SoCalEnthusiast
              Senior Member
              • May 2013
              • 1734

              Have you considered talking to your wife about his actions? Possibly have a talk to him?

              Comment

              • #22
                thedonger
                Senior Member
                • Nov 2006
                • 1080

                Originally posted by negolien
                Soooo having manners is a bad thing in your world?
                I think you missed my point. Would you try to "Dry Fire" my GF if I introduced you?
                sigpic

                TheDonger.CalGuns@gmail.com

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                • #23
                  SoCalEnthusiast
                  Senior Member
                  • May 2013
                  • 1734

                  No I would just tell my father in law to "pipe down" and he's being rude.

                  Comment

                  • #24
                    tbc
                    Calguns Addict
                    • Jun 2011
                    • 5955

                    Lesson learned. Do not show your father in law any gun in the future.


                    Sent from iPhone

                    Comment

                    • #25
                      SNCaliber
                      Veteran Member
                      • Mar 2012
                      • 3222

                      dry firing is fine for a non rim fire gun as stated above, I do it all the time practicing aiming in the house, but still it is a little disrespectful to do it to someones gun if not asked first.
                      -Sang

                      Comment

                      • #26
                        Doghouse_Riley
                        Senior Member
                        • Feb 2013
                        • 519

                        Originally posted by Hopalong
                        I would never dry fire someone's gun who handed it to me to check out.

                        Not because it would harm the gun, but because I don't think it is proper etiquette.
                        ^^^This. Some folks are very anal about their guns and don't want them dry fired.

                        That said, like a lot of people have said, on a quality centerfire firearm dry fire is not going to hurt it. In fact, IMO dry fire is an important training regimen. It's easy to do, and can be practised sitting watching TV at home. Doesn't use precious ammo. And has many benefits. http://www.ar15.com/archive/topic.ht...f=118&t=446542

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                        • #27
                          the86d
                          Calguns Addict
                          • Jul 2011
                          • 9587

                          M-16s are dry-fired all the time in bootcamp,
                          As far as handguns... RTFM.

                          Ruger SR-9 Dry-fire=kosher with a mag inserted (but you may want to clear the mag and the chamber 1st..). I think it is even okay for an M9/92fs.

                          Can't you throw a used shell casing in and allow it to smack the used primer again, a few times?

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                          • #28
                            G60
                            Veteran Member
                            • Feb 2008
                            • 3989

                            It's fine.

                            It's an HK.
                            "Any unarmed people are slaves, or are subject to slavery at any given moment." - Dr. Huey P. Newton

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                            • #29
                              tbc
                              Calguns Addict
                              • Jun 2011
                              • 5955

                              I dry fire all my guns to improve my accuracy.

                              I also dry fire my GSG 1911 22... it's a hammer fired platform so I inserted a rubber gasket to the area the hammer strikes.




                              Sent from iPhone

                              Comment

                              • #30
                                davek8s
                                Senior Member
                                • Jan 2011
                                • 2014

                                I dry fire all my guns, even the rimfires. It's no big deal

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