Re: Practicing clearing a malfunction.
Posted: Wed Apr 16, 2008 9:01 pm
Great idea!
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,.flintknapper wrote:We practice these using snap caps. Have a partner "Jam" your weapon anyway he/she chooses, place under a towel on a table. At the buzzer, the shooter uncovers the weapon, determines what type of "stoppage" has occurred and clears the weapon.The failure to fire, so I'm told, is the most common type of malfunction in modern autoloaders. Other malfs, failure to extract, double feed, etc.. are good to practice, but you have to set them up. That takes the surprise/realism out of the practice, and that's a big factor.
Puts the "surprise" right back into it.
Those are a steal compared to snap caps. I wonder if anyone has a mix and match? I don't need 50 of 1 cal, but would love 5 or 10 of multi calssrothstein wrote:I have to agree with LT on the need to practice clearing a weapon, and on where to concentrate your attention. When i train the cadets, that is exactly how we do it. We spend maybe 2 hours out of a three day block of instruction practicing clearing jams, and then just run a hot range the rest of the time. Most of them never need to clear the jam except for the one section where we force it.
I like snap caps for this type of practice, but GT distributors has these safety trainers. They are a lot cheaper than snap caps (brand name).
I agree 100%. I have yet to see a brand of gun that didn't fail at a match.....revolvers included.CompVest wrote:Even Glocks malfunction! I know the Glock fans don't like to be reminded but when you have been to as many matches as I have you see all guns will malfunction.
My suggestion is that if you practice enough and get involved with IDPA you will get sufficient malfunction practice and have a lot of fun doing it!