• CharlieActual@lemmy.zip
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    8 months ago

    Old revolvers had the firing in on the hammer and could fire if they were dropped and landed on an uncooked hammer. For most of the past century, however, the firing pin has been separate from the hammer and that kind of drop-fire is impossible.

    I have some bad news for you. https://www.cnn.com/interactive/2018/06/investigates/sig-sauer-p320-drop-fire/

    That model was one of the most popular service pistols - LOADS and LOADS of them out there. That is also not the only model with drop-fire problems… Remington 700s will unintentional discharge as well:

    https://www.gunsamerica.com/digest/remington-fix-triggers-model-700-rifles/

    There are others I cannot recall.

    It’s a problem.

    • AlDente@sh.itjust.works
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      8 months ago

      Since these are not revolvers, they don’t add to the point of carrying on an empty cylinder.

      Outside of the revolver discussion, it’s important to note that both of these examples were the result of QA issues that have since been corrected.

      • Liz@midwest.social
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        8 months ago

        Revolvers aren’t designed that way anymore.

        Counters with design problems in auto-loaders and shotguns.

        Welcome to arguing on the internet!

        • AlDente@sh.itjust.works
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          8 months ago

          Firstly, I don’t have an obsession with revolvers; it’s just that you responded to a conversation specifically about design changes in revolvers that mitigated the need to carry on empty cylinder.

          Secondly, this is another example of a limited QA issue that has since been corrected with a recall. It doesn’t seem to indicate that a modern revolver with properly functioning parts would be dangerous to carry with all cylinders loaded. Otherwise, are you to say all airbags are dangerous just because of the Takata/Honda issue that killed some people when the airbags exploded?

          • Gabu@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            All airbags are dangerous, and this has been known for decades. It’s a literal explosive box sitting right besides your thumbs. The fact they save lives doesn’t make them any less dangerous. Now, if that’s valid for an item developed exclusively to save lives, imagine what we can say about a weapon intended solely for killing and maiming.

          • CharlieActual@lemmy.zip
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            8 months ago

            bsession with revolvers; it’s just that you responded to a conversation specifically about design changes in revolvers that mitigated the need to carry on empty cylinder.

            Secondly, this is another example of a limited QA issue that

            … Whatever. Information free positions are impossible to discuss, you have a great evening and good luck with that stuff.

      • CharlieActual@lemmy.zip
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        8 months ago

        That’s not the statement I was replying to. The “this only happened to revolvers like 100 years ago” was the focus, which is just factually wrong. Still happens, sooo… great? I guess. Have a nice day

    • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      There’s lots of guns with problems. But double-action revolvers like the one in the picture aren’t subject to the same issues as a Colt Single Action Army.

      Yeah, the P365 was and is a dumpster fire of a gun the Army never should have adopted over the objectively superior guns it was up against from Glock, Beretta, HK, and Smith and Wesson.

      Though zero of them in military service ever had that problem. It was discovered in the army Modular Handgun trials and corrected prior to deployment. What they didn’t do was fix the guns being sold to the public until a YouTube video came out showing the issue. People should have gone to jail for that bullshit.

      Yeah, Remington makes shitty guns and has for decades.

      Taurus made guns that shoot when shaken, and are still sold in California because California won’t authorize newer, safer models to be sold.