Dry Fire Training

Gun, shooting and equipment discussions unrelated to CHL issues

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Skiprr
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Re: Dry Fire Training

#16

Post by Skiprr »

Skiprr wrote:Glocks are entirely different. You release the striker, and the Glock trigger becomes essentially pinned to the rear until you reset the striker. In that regard, Gaston Glock didn't help us out for dry-fire practice.
Three ways to learn stuff on this Forum: 1) Read what others write; 2) Ask questions; 3) Post stuff yourself and wait to be corrected by someone else. :mrgreen:

A friend saw my "Glock's unfriendly to dry fire" comment and sent me a PM that basically said, "Dude, all you need is a little piece of cardboard and you can get repetitive dry-fire trigger pulls all day long on a Glock."

Dirt simple solution. Don't know why I didn't think of it on my own (my excuse--and I'm sticking to it ;-) --is that I use Glocks less than 1911s and XDs):

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