can all pneumatic be safely dry-fired?
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can all pneumatic be safely dry-fired?
I am new to airguns, but have read that pneumatics can be dry-fired, but then read something about a gun that had a special feature which allowed dry-firing (it was a pneumatic as I recall).
I just purchased a used Hammerli AR20, and want to adjust the trigger to my liking, and would like to be able to dry-fire. Could not find anything specific to this gun relating to dry-firing.
Can anyone help?
Thank you.
I just purchased a used Hammerli AR20, and want to adjust the trigger to my liking, and would like to be able to dry-fire. Could not find anything specific to this gun relating to dry-firing.
Can anyone help?
Thank you.
You could just take off the air cylinder. No compressed air to worry about then, and you should be able to adjust your trigger as you please without noise or air rushing out. I suspect that such a rifle can be safely dry fired with the cylinder full and in place but I don't know the gun, so can't suggest how to go about this. Is there not a switch to go between fire and safe modes? This is quite common on PCP rifles and pistols. The dry fired trigger setting might not be identical to the pressurized firing trigger. Some guns behave slightly differently between the two, probably owing to variation in trigger mechanisms which in some cases change due to back-pressure from the air behind the valve... but in a high quality match gun this should not be a factor.
It's simple: unscrew the cylinder a little and dry fire to your hearts content.
I personally will dry fire anything except a .22 that peens the chamber edge . If it breaks I fix it (and I can fix a peened chamber, too).
I just added to this, realizing I hadn't really answered your question well.
A match gun that compresses air in advance of shot is called a single stroke pneumatic (SSP). Dry fire at will, although it may make noise depending on whether it has a dry fire provision (no need to compress the air, just cock the action).
The FWB series of 65, 80, and 90 are spring powered. The 65 (maybe 80, too) has a device that allows it to recoil when shooting. This is not dry firing, but according to the manufacturer all three of these may be shot without a pellet, but the 90 doesn't need to be cocked to do it (electronic trigger).
I personally will dry fire anything except a .22 that peens the chamber edge . If it breaks I fix it (and I can fix a peened chamber, too).
I just added to this, realizing I hadn't really answered your question well.
A match gun that compresses air in advance of shot is called a single stroke pneumatic (SSP). Dry fire at will, although it may make noise depending on whether it has a dry fire provision (no need to compress the air, just cock the action).
The FWB series of 65, 80, and 90 are spring powered. The 65 (maybe 80, too) has a device that allows it to recoil when shooting. This is not dry firing, but according to the manufacturer all three of these may be shot without a pellet, but the 90 doesn't need to be cocked to do it (electronic trigger).
Last edited by Rover on Sat Jun 22, 2013 8:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- RandomShotz
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Maybe.Conradin wrote:You just ruined numerous marketing people's career, including those that insist and sell the hardest electronic trigger is the way to go for dry fire.Rover wrote:Rover wrote:
It's simple: unscrew the cylinder a little and dry fire to your hearts content.
I have an old SAM pistol that I do that with. But in the case of Morini, unscrewing the cylinder trips a latch which is intended to keep the shooter from shooting when the cylinder pressure is too low. If you have a mechanical trigger, you can't cock it. If you have an electronic trigger, it doesn't matter.
Roger
- RandomShotz
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Um, no, it's just a K10. I got it from someone who (I believe) was dumping something on GunBroker that he acquired at an estate sale. It's a nice enough gun, but it has some minor mechanical weak points which I won't hijack this thread to elaborate on. But I don't think it will be a collectible any time soon.conradin wrote:Wow, you have a collector's item! Is that the M10 or M5 (the shorty)?
Roger
- RandomShotz
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Re: can all pneumatic be safely dry-fired?
Almost all airguns can be safely dry fired, it's not exclusive to electronic triggers. I would read the manual and if that doesn't help speak to the dealer you got the gun from or Walther / Hammerli direct - they all speak good English.mgh wrote:I am new to airguns, but have read that pneumatics can be dry-fired, but then read something about a gun that had a special feature which allowed dry-firing (it was a pneumatic as I recall).
I just purchased a used Hammerli AR20, and want to adjust the trigger to my liking, and would like to be able to dry-fire. Could not find anything specific to this gun relating to dry-firing.
Can anyone help?
Thank you.
In most guns I've seen you either cock and don't fully close (as per Steyrs, Anschutz) or they have a switch - mechanical or electronic. If you can't make that work then just cock it and don't load a pellet. You need to do that anyway to get the feel totally right.
Rob.
That's normal... some guns hold pressure in the regulator even if the cylinder is off.Anonymous wrote:I took the air cylinder off, and found out that the regulator holds at least one shot in it, as the gun fired! Did not try again after that.
It should only have air for one shoot and a small puff after that...
Use a pillow at the end of the barrel to suppress the sound.
Now you can dry fire.
Hope this helps