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Justan Olphart[_2_] Justan Olphart[_2_] is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Aug 2015
Posts: 1,244
Default Give that guy another beer.

On 1/23/2016 5:37 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 1/23/2016 1:02 AM, wrote:
On Fri, 22 Jan 2016 19:38:14 -0800 (PST), True North
wrote:

Ditzy Dan spews...

"I would hate to be the guy with that job!"


Gee...don't y'all think they might have a mechanical machine to do it?


You don't need a live round to drop test a gun. A blank or just an
empty primed case will work just fine. (the latter being the easiest
and cheapest).
I also doubt this is a machine. I imagine there is a protocol they
follow (height, surface, angle etc). They just have some government
apparatchik sitting on a stool dropping guns all day.



Just a clarification ... virtually *all* handguns since the 1940's have
some sort of transfer block or other mechanism that prevents the hammer
from striking the firing pin unless the trigger is pulled. The drop
test required in Massachusetts is intended to ensure the mechanism works
as advertised.


I wouldn't get all warm and fuzzy knowing that, at some point in a gun's
life, it passed a drop test. There are some cowboys out there who have
trigger work done that would make a gun more likely to go off when
dropped. There was a poster here that had work done on his gun that
caused it to be dangerous to even look at. He got rid of it like a hot
potatoe once it was brought to his attention how dangerous that gun was.