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The Range
Rimfire Weapons
dryfiring
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<blockquote data-quote="Ready_fire_aim" data-source="post: 4372023" data-attributes="member: 50626"><p>Well it all depends (typical in life)… individual circumstances determine the situation. Some .22s are ok to dryfire (Glock 44 for example) but I’d say the majority of .22lr guns should NOT be dry fired. Especially when you can use spent casings or drywall anchors as almost free snap caps. No need to risk it</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ready_fire_aim, post: 4372023, member: 50626"] Well it all depends (typical in life)… individual circumstances determine the situation. Some .22s are ok to dryfire (Glock 44 for example) but I’d say the majority of .22lr guns should NOT be dry fired. Especially when you can use spent casings or drywall anchors as almost free snap caps. No need to risk it [/QUOTE]
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