No, never happened to me, have only met one gun owner that shot himself in the hand while cleaning a firearm.fix-the-spade said:Certainly.Mathurin said:I dont know what a "glock wall" is, could you be more specific?
To dismantle a Glock hand gun the trigger has to be pulled to disengage the slide lock. Which is fine provided you make sure the chamber is empty.
It's depressingly common for Glock owners taking their gun apart to be lax in this check and have a round chambered when they go to disassemble, they pull the trigger to start removing the slide and BANG. An ostensibly 'unloaded' weapon goes off and Glock wall is the result.
It's so common that Glock Wall is pretty much the go to term for an accidental discharge during maintanence. Usually because of poor handling practice.
So basically, have you or any friends had a gun you didn't think was loaded go off in your hands or work vice? If so what were the consequences?
A good gun owner knows that a firearm is dangerous and must be treated with respect
There is heated debate about whether a bolt action is more accurate than any other action, I dont know, what I can say is that no matter what the shooter is the main cause of accuracy, the difference between a bolt action and other type will be so minimal that its impossible to tell without locking the gun down to a bench and taking the shooter out of the equation.Scabadus said:As a Hitman: Blood Money fan, does a bolt action mechanism actually increase the accuracy of a shot?
And being from England and hence only ever having fired a .22 rifle under VERY strict control in the cadets, how much harder is it to fire a double action revolver than a normal gun? I've heard you have to put "more pressure" on the trigger, but nothing more accurate.
A double action requires a longer trigger pull, and somewhat more pressure.
Some find that firing double action increases their accuracy because they tend to "yank" the trigger, much like a person playing a videogame will mash the button on their mouse. This causes the gun to move and changes the point of impact.
As a double action tends to "surprise" the shooter when it actually fires, it can counter act the yank affect.
These questions are overly vague.twistedmic said:What size caliber are our non-target practice handguns? And what caliber do you think is the best for home/ self defense?
Any handgun can be used for target practice, so what do you mean by "non-target practice"
And a large number of calibers exist, not sure what you are asking.
Self defense Caliber is more about the person shooting than the situation
Depends on the firearm.dimensione510 said:If you fire two shots with a revolver, and then reload, do ALL the shells automatically eject, or just the ones you fired? Or do they not automtically eject at all? (would probably depend on the gun)
Some double action revolvers automatically eject the shells, not many though
Most have a lever you push that will shove the shells out, these will shove all the rounds the same distance but since unfired rounds are longer sometimes it will shove only the empty shells all the way out and leave the fired ones to be pushed back/fall back into the chambers.
Some revolvers have no easy method of removing the spent casings, they must be manually pushed out with a rod.