When people dryfire for practice do you have one of those rubber rounds in the chanber or is it ok to fire the pin with nothing in it? Im new and I need practice, but dont want to start off doing things the wrong way.
I took an old case that I culled, seated a culled bullet in it, and shot the primer pocket full of blue RTV silicone. My own snap cap. Gives my firing pin something to land against, but is soft, and doesn't seem to wear out.
I agree with the most of what has been posted but would never dry fire any older firearm for fear of metal fatigue causing the pin to break. I've seen it happen on a pristine 1916 Navy Luger.
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: vman</div><div class="ubbcode-body">whats modern got to do with anything? </div></div>
The same principles apply be it a rifle, pistol even a compound bow. All of that kinetic energy has to be trasnfered to something otherwise the system just ends up absorbing it.
You can explode limbs on a compound bow if you dry fire without an arrow, and even ruin the riser... the arrows on my bow are ultralite shafts with a 125 grain head. Thats the difference between shooting it properly and potentially breaking it! A couple hundred grains.
Im sure you can dry fire as much as you want without using a cap, but it does add extra stress to your components.