Can you dry fire a springfield xdm




















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Related Articles Preparation. Preparation Range Time, in Phoenix, Arizona, set out to make its shooting DIY Last year, we built a gauge shotgun from a kit and a lot of pipe Gear Every day, most of us have approximately 12 to 16 hours of sunlight Gear view.

Preparation view. Preparation If you don't look at the Fenris and see the version of the rig Use another profile. Deactivated Account. Almost Done! Thank you for registering! You should upgrade or use an alternative browser. Thread starter Annihilator Start date Nov 23, Long answer, "yes" with a "but. Keystone Ronin. Also as mentioned the HellCat has been known to break the firing pin during excessive dry fire.

Good article Annihilator. Keystone said:. Click to expand The Hellcat also requires a dry fire to disassemble SimonRL Custom. Annihilator said:. SimonRL said:. Actually, the TX22 can be dry fired. It also requires a trigger pull to disassemble. My TX22 has a green dot on it and I can shoot it with surgical precision. PunchySunshine Elite. Someone mentioned above that the Hellcat had an issue with the firing pin breaking from dryfiring. Is this still accurate? I also have a SA , hammer fired.

Is there an issue with dryfiring this as well? However, to my surprise, I was given a brand new mag! I was so shocked! Thank you so much for your generosity, Stan! You now have a loyal customer for life! I've been sharing the DFM with friends and a few of them have made the purchase. Please consider making a model for the CZ P 10 series.

My first year at SHOT and I was more intrigued by stuff I found to be innovative rather than just a new take on old stuff usually complete with flashy advertising, "operator", "EDC" or "tactical" in the marketing. I saw this and was truly happy--the table was busy as you can imagine but I got a chance to talk with the inventor briefly and immediately texted a couple of buddies. I bought both variants and love them. Now when the kids are in bed, I have added "movers" to my dry-fire time using lefties on screen while watching TV with my better half.

Not likely. Fun and useful? You know it. I spent the better part of my adult life traveling the world on the taxpayer's dime and started my family only after retiring. It's been good busy, but now that the kids are old enough to not feel guilty catching a match or two over the summer, and with all the extra dry fire time I'm finding with these, I'm gonna have to start competing this summer. These are phenomenal training aids and a heckuvalotta fun to boot.

Well done! I have been using the DryFireMag for over a year. It has been the most significant improvement to my training to date. I would consistently shoot to the low left and have been for years but I healed this training scar with consistent dry fire practice. Is it worth the money? Please let me explain. I don't want to bash on these other products, I mean, they're great but limited. I have one device that requires CO2 to make it function. It's great because you get to practice with your actual trigger.

However, it's cumbersome to use. You have to buy the CO2, fill up the device after only about 20ish shots, and it requires a lot of maintenance periodic replacement of certain parts due to wear, refilling of CO2 tanks, etc. Finally, I decided to get it. Wow, much better. First of all, installing the DryFireMag into the gun is as simple as reloading a fresh mag into your gun. Secondly, you can get the trigger to feel identical to your actual trigger. I mean, it's not gonna feel exactly the same obviously, you're pressing against a little spring and it makes a double popping sound.

But the weight and breaking point is really all you need to worry about, and I'm telling you, you can get it identical to your trigger I have an aftermarket trigger. And finally, and most importantly, the DryFireMag allows you to find your trigger finger fatigue point. Other products, like the one I mentioned before, does not allow you to get to that point.

The CO2 product, for instance, forces to stop your trigger pulls after about 20 because the CO2 runs out. During this time of refilling the CO2, your finger is resting - no more fatigue. But with the DryFireMag, you can pull it infinitely, with every pull being identical. This is how I found out that my trigger finger starts to fatigue at around 60 trigger pulls very quickly , at this point, pulling the trigger becomes very difficult, but it allows you to identify exactly which muscles of your hand you need for a trigger pull and to stretch the limits of those muscles.

Only this way, you can develop a solid beast of a trigger finger that we all desire. It's just like working out to gain strength. You're never going to gain anything if you're not pushing yourself until it becomes difficult. That is why this DryFireMag is worth it. If you want to become a better shooter. This thing showed up at my door within 48 hours of the purchase.

It was like magic!!! DryFireMag is a modified Glock magazine that allows you to practice dry firing your Glock safely at home. I got the dry fire mag because I flinch when I shoot. When I got the dry fire mag in the mail I took 6 weeks off from the range and did dry practice with the dry fire mag for 15 minutes a day 4 days a week.

After the 6 weeks my shot groups went from inches at 21 feet to inches at 21 feet. This thing works. Dry practice works. The dry fire mag makes your time spent doing dry practice a lot more effecient. You will get way more trigger pulls during your dry fire practice if you're using the dry fire mag. No time wasted racking the slide a billion times. Dry practice is way more fun now.

I also use the dry fire mag while at the range. I'll fire a magazine and then I'll whip out the dry fire mag and get a few dry reps in.

It really helps me keep my groups tight while at the range. I look forward to my groups continuing to shrink thanks to dry practice and the dry fire mag! Where the standard spring actually pulls the trigger bar rearwards the NY springs push up on the bar and increase the amount of force required to pull the trigger. If you've ever been concerned about cycling the slide every time to dry fire shoot and falling back to this repetition in a real life or death situation then typical dry fire practice is a real dangerous way to train.

That's why I was so excited to find the Dry Fire Mag. It lets me draw, target, dry fire and practice trigger reset all without having to rack the slide. I'm also a USCCA instructor and being able to use the Dry Fire Mag with students that are completely new to shooting and dry fire practice is a huge benefit.

We can practice with a real firearm in a safe way before going on to live fire practice on the range. Michael A. I use it on my Glock 19 duty weapon.

Outstanding product to practice with.. I really saw a difference when I went to put some rounds downrange.

A friend of mine gave me a dry fire mag as a gift. I regularly outshot him at the range and I implored him to dry practice more often. He discovered the dry fire mag and bought me one when he bought himself one. I have been using it more often than I was dry practicing before and I expect to that my fundamental skills with sight alignment grip presentation and Trigger press having proved. I will have to wait until I make it to the range to verify this but more dry practice can never be a bad thing.

I would purchase one if they were available. I do a fair amount of dry fire with mine, Her not so much. Her 9 always shows more wear on the pin than any of the others but I have not had one break so far. Mine broke in less than 15K dry fire and rounds fired combined. I did my homework before hand, and had the appropriate punches roll pin punch with nipple, and roll pin starter punch from Springer precision and roll pins from Powder River Precision on hand to fix it.

It set me back about 15 minutes. No worries. Start new topic. Recommended Posts.



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