dryfiring

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Nov 3, 2010
Messages
13,478
Reaction score
21,994
Location
yukon ok
I bought a used Ruger 22 revolver from a member here that got it from another member here with the stipulation that it was picky on what ammo went into it.

Yea that was because some guy dry fired it.
What happened is it dinked and puched in the area where the rim of the 22 ammo would rest and would not allow you to stick the ammo into the hole because of the protrusion blocking the hole at the top.
Just so happened I had my chain saw with me when I went to shoot the Ruger and I had my round files.
I took a round file and filed the problem spot.

So for me it is a HUGE NO.
It is not good practice to dry fire a rim fire.

I am not mad about the buy and in fact I am educated from that purchase.
 

enuf

Sharpshooter
Supporting Member
Special Hen Supporter
Joined
Apr 26, 2014
Messages
849
Reaction score
1,354
Location
Collinsville
This is good, my thinking was the firing pin, but the rim face - that all makes sense. Good feedback. I am not a fan of dryfiring anything, have I done it, yes, but don't like it. I have a handful of those spring loaded clear/red snap-caps; I like those. Honestly, I figured even with a center fire that the firing pin hitting the opening of the firing pin hole cannot be good on either piece.
 

red442joe

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Dec 9, 2021
Messages
326
Reaction score
369
Location
Ypsilanti, MI
The
I bought a used Ruger 22 revolver from a member here that got it from another member here with the stipulation that it was picky on what ammo went into it.

Yea that was because some guy dry fired it.
What happened is it dinked and puched in the area where the rim of the 22 ammo would rest and would not allow you to stick the ammo into the hole because of the protrusion blocking the hole at the top.
Just so happened I had my chain saw with me when I went to shoot the Ruger and I had my round files.
I took a round file and filed the problem spot.

So for me it is a HUGE NO.
It is not good practice to dry fire a rim fire.

I am not mad about the buy and in fact I am educated from that purchase.
The chamber iron linked above is better, and easier on the chamber than the file.

Joe
 

Aries

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Feb 1, 2019
Messages
5,731
Reaction score
8,548
Location
Sapulpa
I bought a used Ruger 22 revolver from a member here that got it from another member here with the stipulation that it was picky on what ammo went into it.

Yea that was because some guy dry fired it.
What happened is it dinked and puched in the area where the rim of the 22 ammo would rest and would not allow you to stick the ammo into the hole because of the protrusion blocking the hole at the top.
Just so happened I had my chain saw with me when I went to shoot the Ruger and I had my round files.
I took a round file and filed the problem spot.

So for me it is a HUGE NO.
It is not good practice to dry fire a rim fire.

I am not mad about the buy and in fact I am educated from that purchase.
I swear swampratt I thought you were about to say you fixed a revolver with a chainsaw. :pms2:
 
Joined
Nov 3, 2010
Messages
13,478
Reaction score
21,994
Location
yukon ok
The

The chamber iron linked above is better, and easier on the chamber than the file.

Joe
Yes it might be better if you had one.
The only part my round file touched was the tiny dent that protruded into the chamber.
Yes it would have been nice if I had a swage and in theory the metal should go right back where it was.

I have never heard of that little tool or used one but it looks interesting for sure.

The Ruger I fixed 2 years ago is still in use and is just as reliable and accurate as it was the day I fixed it and a few thousand rounds have been shot through it since then.

That Ruger Wrangler is much more accurate than the Heritage 22 revolver I had and that one was never dry fired. Props to Ruger.

You could not hit a rabbit with the Heritage at 40 feet with any ammo.
Maybe I got a lemon.
 

mtngunr

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Aug 18, 2020
Messages
712
Reaction score
1,367
Location
Far East Okrahoma, USA
The guy above mentioning a Ruger revolver did not mention type/age....generally Rugers are safe to dryfire and manuals say so, as the firing pin is SUPPOSED to be too short to hit cylinder or edge of chamber, but now and again one sneaks through, so any sign of empty impact means cease and desist, and send it back for repair or install new pin own self or file pin.
Many guns not safe to dry fire, too many to list. Always go with what manufacturer says, then double check. Snap caps are not always a fix except to protect chamber, while many type firearms have a retaining crosspin for firing pin which is damaged by excess firing pin fwd movement, and snap caps do not have the firm stop to firing pin travel which real ammo provides.
 

Ahall

Sharpshooter
Special Hen
Joined
Nov 8, 2021
Messages
260
Reaction score
372
Location
Claremore
Dry firing rimfires is generally not advisable

Many designs allow the firing pin to travel farther than the thickness of the rim and peen the chamber

The impact can damage the chamber, firing pin or both.

Some designs are “safe” to dry fire, but I error on the conservative side and don’t do it. No point developing bad habits.

Fixing the chamber is simple with the ironing tool discussed, if you can get to the chamber with it.
Interference on loading is a common symptom but in severe cases the peening can displace enough material to leave the rim unsupported and prevent reliable ignition

The file technique works, but if it happens a few more times you might find yourself in the severe damage class with no metal to push back in.
 

Latest posts

Top Bottom