■ Anschutz does not recommend dry-firing its rimfires. It says frequent dry-firers should install its special firing pin. The company also notes that on most guns other parts, like springs, usually wear out before firing pins; the majority of its guns returned for damage from dry-firing come via Chinese and Japanese competitors, as these countries are known for dry-firing because places to actually fire a gun there are rare.
■ Ruger says dry-firing the company’s 10/22 rifle will not damage it. This makes sense as I mentioned above, without the last round bolt hold-open device you will inevitably dry fire on an empty chamber once you run out of ammo.
■ Henry Repeating Arms says shooters can dry-fire its guns all they want.
■ Smith & Wesson says dry-firing can damage rimfires.
■ Browning confirms dry-firing won’t damage firing pins or chambers of its newer guns.
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Tuesday, February 25, 2020
Dry-firing a Rimfire: Yes or No?
An article from The Firearm Blog on the topic of dry-firing a rimfire, by which I assume dry fire practice. The most significant part of the article is the information they obtained from different manufacturers:
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