To believe anything else, is to lull myself into a false sense of security and start disregarding the rules of gun safety.
That's how I feel and I'm unanimous in that statement.

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That's a good way to go ;)joe817 wrote:I believe that any gun, can go off at any time, announced or unannounced, when dropped.
To believe anything else, is to lull myself into a false sense of security and start disregarding the rules of gun safety.
That's how I feel and I'm unanimous in that statement.
(I had to think long and hard on this). In all honesty? I'd have to say no. IMO, chances of the impact of the falling gun hitting the floor and discharging, is greater than the chance catching it and cushioning the impact. I guess I'd have to say I'd try to catch it, IF AND ONLY IF I was in a place where people were near by. If I was in a room by myself(eg: in my bedroom and the family at the other end of the house), then I'd probably let it fall and just get the heck out of the way.dicion wrote:That's a good way to go ;)joe817 wrote:I believe that any gun, can go off at any time, announced or unannounced, when dropped.
To believe anything else, is to lull myself into a false sense of security and start disregarding the rules of gun safety.
That's how I feel and I'm unanimous in that statement.
However, the question is, do you agree with my saying that "if it's falling, let it fall. Don't grab for it"?
To me, the chance of AD/ND is only increased by attempting to catch a falling firearm.
my Beretta 92 has a FPB, so it's free, free falling.dicion wrote:That's a good way to go ;)
However, the question is, do you agree with my saying that "if it's falling, let it fall. Don't grab for it"?
To me, the chance of AD/ND is only increased by attempting to catch a falling firearm.
And this is where we disagree. I believe that grabbing for a firearm while it's falling can very likely cause a violation of the 4 rules, eg, you might put your finger on the trigger & squeese it as you're trying to catch it, therefore, in the case of some handguns with only a trigger safery, WILL cause it to discharge.joe817 wrote:
(I had to think long and hard on this). In all honesty? I'd have to say no. IMO, chances of the impact of the falling gun hitting the floor and discharging, is greater than the chance catching it and cushioning the impact. I guess I'd have to say I'd try to catch it, IF AND ONLY IF I was in a place where people were near by. If I was in a room by myself(eg: in my bedroom and the family at the other end of the house), then I'd probably let it fall and just get the heck out of the way.
It is an eminently potentially deadly situation, what ever you do.
Note: This is ONLY my opinion, and I'm NOT recommending that you do what I would do.
Same as a revolver. But if you pull the trigger is it really AD?dicion wrote:To AD a Condition 1 Glock, all you would have to do while it was falling was grab and pull the trigger. Thats it. Would DEFINATELY recommend not even attempting to try to catch a falling Glock.
i like the way you think...tfrazier wrote:
Seems like just running those dividers all the way to the floor would solve multiple problems (Larry Craig) along with giving folks additional privacy and some extra cover in the rare event an idiot drops a gun in the next stall.
I'm the guy that had the RIA 1911 compact 45 discharge with Remington 230 grn JHP ammo,the gun fell from waist height on a tiled bathroom floor,the only alteration to the gun was an ambi safety was installed and working at the time.I did not try to catch the gun but watch it fall straight down on its muzzle, a fraction of a second later the boom.After that incident I replaced the stock factory FP spring with a wolf x strong spring.The gun had about 1000 rounds thru it at that timegemini wrote:as almost anything is possible, I also believe that a mechanically sound 1911, with or without the FP safety, improbable to discharge from a drop of aprox. 4'. I read of the RIA discharge on another forum. The owner had a FP spring that was too short/or too weak.Liberty wrote:This is not true, 1911s without a firing pin block can potentially go bang when dropped. This includes the original design 1911s, and There was a thread about a Rock Island Armory 1911 discharging in this forumdicion wrote: Then again, if it was a 1911 instead of some piece of BT, it would require both the trigger AND the grip safety to be pressed, in opposite directions of eachother, to fire, not to mention the thumb safety...![]()
I'm not sayin'.. I'm just sayin.
If you can find other instances of 1911's going off from short drops, whether directly on the muzzle or otherwise please post a link or reference to that info. With or without FP safetys. Thanks in advance.
tfrazier wrote:Seems like just running those dividers all the way to the floor would solve multiple problems (Larry Craig) along with giving folks additional privacy and some extra cover in the rare event an idiot drops a gun in the next stall.