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#1
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Condition 2 has a significant potential for ND on a pistol without a decocker (there is a reason they make decockers...). I personally have had three instances of my thumb slipping off of a hammer or cocking piece while lowering it on a loaded chamber. Muzzle was pointed in a safe direction all three times.
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Jim CBOB0497 "That rifle hanging on the wall of the working class flat or laborer's cottage is the symbol of democracy. It is our job to see that it stays there." - George Orwell |
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#2
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Quote:
OH sorry I misunderstood the question. No harm will come to the firearm for sitting in condition 1 for a long period of time. If you are worried about it firing due to some crazy event in safe or in a nightstand I doubt this will happen if your gun is properly maintained. The palm safety makes it almost impossible to fire if its working properly, not to mention the thumb safety should be used as well, so it would have to fail on two levels and have the trigger pulled for it to potentially fire on a shelf. Never say never but doubt you would ever have an issue with a 1911, or a or m&p as well. They are engineered to not go off. I think its perfectly safe with monthly checks. Hope this is a more clear answer Quote:
YES! You are very correct. BUT 1911's have a 1/2 cock for a reason I know this only works when cocking the pistol and not decocking but never tried that either. You still have to be safe and practice any skill and stuff does still happen.
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Last edited by sdmc530; 02-21-2017 at 06:50 PM. |
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#3
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Let me just say we have lots of great conversations on here and this one is a good one too. Lots of great thoughts coming from folks with great opinions and experiences. This is great, another forum I(we) used to belong to would have had this topic it would have already ended in somebody getting a short ban and people getting pissed at everyone else.
COTEP is the best.
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#4
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OK, so I have been reading, watching video's, and whatnot about what condition to carry a 1911. I have watched about a dozen videos from different known gun trainers/mfgr's.
My name is , and I am wrong about what condition I should carry my gun. Condition 1 is the proper way.....this might not be an epiphany but its the correct way. I found this video that I think explains it best. Doesn't go toward about his storage question, although I still think condition 1 is just fine for it. Anyways 3 minutes of why John M. Browning is smarter than us:
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#6
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Funny you and I watch the same videos, about this last video one of the things that kept popping up in the video comments is that the half cocked position is not meant to be used as resting point for the hammer as wear and possible tear can happen, it's another safety implemented into the 1911 design. The half cock position was meant as a last-ditch effort to catch the hammer before it hits the firing pin, discharging the gun. But it comes at a cost as it can actually damage the half cocked notch in the sear(?).
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Pedro U / Member# 0770
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#7
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I have read many a thread on the sear and i think the repeated violent shooting and cycling is probably the hardest abuse you can do to a pistol. Think about the act of firing the gun then it cycles fast and hard.
Yes the half cock was put in place so the rider would not accidentally shoot his horse or so the story goes. The half notch is pretty small in comparison to the full cock. I could not find any info on sear failures that resulted in a shooting from the half cock but i am sure its happened. I would think if the sear failed you would notice the issues quickly? Maybe?
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