Jump to content
Brian Enos's Forums... Maku mozo!

Cocking Hammer For Dry Firing


n2299

Recommended Posts

Is it bad on my pistol's trigger job to use my thumb to cock the hammer when my dry firing?

I had always racked my slide before. But recently I started using full mags of snap caps when I dry fire. And I found it easier to cock the hammer with my thumb because then I don't have to keep bending over to pick up the ejected caps.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's not bad for the hammer, but it's bad for your thumb when you miss the hammer and slice it open on your razor sharp Bomars - as I discovered yesterday when I looked down and saw the back of my gun dripping in blood. Those damn sights are so sharp I never felt a thing.

Now, where did I leave my files...?

Seriously, they put serrations on hammers for a reason. It's not a problem.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well, here is one tidbit of information...

Kuhnhausen Vol. 1

Sear Protection p. 161

"Remember that a finely tuned sear has an engagement surface that is only about .009 to .010 wide, and, being this thin, is very easily damaged. It's both practical and wise to hold the trigger back [holding the sear out of the way] whenever the slide is cycled for any reason. You automatically do this when firing the pistol."

Those Kuhnhausen book are handy! :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

OK, I can buy the notion of *possibly* damaging my hammer or sear if I was using chintzy case-hardened parts. I find it pretty far-fetched that the typical S-7 toolsteel that most of us are using in racegun parts will be affected to any meaningful degree.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I know the Army's Markmanship Unit Shooting Team does (or used to do this) this when they are loading up. If you watch them on the line after "Load and make ready", they insert a mag, pull the trigger and rack the slide. I know they do so because it disconnects the sear and is the proper "military" way of loading a 1911 (or so I've been told), but I'm a little unsure of pulling the trigger and racking the slide. My luck, I'd do so at the Nationals and the gun would AD and I'd be done.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The thing to do is to hold the trigger, rack the slide and then insert a loaded mag. No more RO worries.

P.S. Don't forget to rack the slide again after inserting mag :)

James Ong

Link to comment
Share on other sites

During dry fire practice hand cycling the slide shouldn't damage the trigger job unless you're letting the slide go forward entirely by recoil spring pressure. I hand cycle the slide most of the time to cock the trigger and thumb cock only if I'm not going to reholster the gun. I never let the slide go forward under spring power and generally only move the slide far enough to just cock the hammer. That's pretty easy to do on a race gun with a light recoil spring and a non-functional slide stop! A 16-18 pound recoil spring and I probably would be thumb cocking 100% of the time.

I don't hold the trigger back or try to hold the hammer with my thumb when loading the gun. I see both as a way to earn an early trip home.

Nolan

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 9 months later...
I know the Army's Markmanship Unit Shooting Team does (or used to do this) this when they are loading up. If you watch them on the line after "Load and make ready", they insert a mag, pull the trigger and rack the slide. I know they do so because it disconnects the sear and is the proper "military" way of loading a 1911 (or so I've been told), but I'm a little unsure of pulling the trigger and racking the slide. My luck, I'd do so at the Nationals and the gun would AD and I'd be done.

And just how the heck do they do that without being DQ'd under 10.3.11?

You wouldn't have to AD in this situation to warrant a DQ. :(

Link to comment
Share on other sites

At LAMR, I see a lot of people thumb cock (w/o holding back the trigger) prior to racking in their first round. Does this do anything other than make the slide a tad easier to rack?

About a month ago I got my 40S&W Para LDA Limited, which came with a burred Commander spur on the hammer. The manual says, though, that thumb cocking the LDA will damage it. Different lockwork, I know, but interesting, especially because:

A new shooter at our club just bought an identical LDA, but says his model has a spurless hammer, which, I presume, was done to make thumbcocking impossible.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

About a month ago I got my 40S&W Para LDA Limited, which came with a burred Commander spur on the hammer. The manual says, though, that thumb cocking the LDA will damage it.

The potential for damage is because the grip safety locks the hammer down. Now using just one hand, like most do, try to hold the grip safety down completely and thumb cock your hammer. Then touch your elbow to your nose! :P That is why they don't want you to thumb cock your pistol.

You can hold down the grip safety and cock the gun with your weak hand.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well, here is one tidbit of information...

Kuhnhausen Vol. 1

Sear Protection p. 161

"Remember that a finely tuned sear has an engagement surface that is only about .009 to .010 wide, and, being this thin, is very easily damaged. It's both practical and wise to hold the trigger back [holding the sear out of the way] whenever the slide is cycled for any reason. You automatically do this when firing the pistol."

Those Kuhnhausen book are handy!

This is old information, from a time when the only way to get a decently light trigger pull on a 1911 was to seriously lessen the hammer/sear engagement. By contrast, with the extreme smoothness that comes from today's top quality, EDM cut hammers and sears, you can't get a trigger pull over about 3-1/2 pounds without doing things like bending the sear spring. And that's from a hammer where the hooks are still full size. Holding the trigger to the rear is simply a crutch for a crappy trigger job.

It's also, in my opinion, dangerous. What happens if you ever get confused and change, "Hold the trigger to the rear, cycle the action" into "Cycle the action, hold the trigger to the rear"? BOOM!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Now using just one hand, like most do, try to hold the grip safety down completely and thumb cock your hammer. Then touch your elbow to your nose!  That is why they don't want you to thumb cock your pistol.

You can hold down the grip safety and cock the gun with your weak hand.

I was taught from the beginning that, unless there's some pressing reason to do so, you should never break your master grip once acquired. IOW, why thumb cock with the master hand thumb? It's not terribly ergonomically efficient as far as getting the hammer cocked easily, and requires breaking and reacquiring the master grip every time you thumb cock. Just hold the gun in your master hand and thumb cock with the support hand thumb. Much more efficient.

My dry fire is of two types: (1) Draw, reload, transitions, during all of which I thumb cock before reholstering simply because it's faster and easier than cycling the action. (2) Just focusing on trigger control, with a two-hand grip, SHO and WHO, during which I cycle the action while holding the trigger to the rear so I can then practice hitting the trigger reset. So I do it both ways, for different reasons, in different types of practice.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

thread drift...

So, Duane, do you have to break your master grip to drop the mag on a reload? I see a lot of people do that - shifting the gun in the hand in order to get the thumb on the release, even if it is a light, extended one. Then, of course, they have to reacquire their firing grip.

I have small hands, and the move for my thumb is way too much. I do what Merle Edington does: I use my middle finger of my strong hand. I can get onto the release w/o shifting my grip at all.

drift off...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You guys are awesome, I never would have thought about this....

It seems the do's and don't of this subject both have valid points.

Cocking the hammer without holding the trigger back keeps the top half of the sear riding against the hammer's surface. With a 14oz, thinly faced sear this could eventually wear or deform enough material to noticeably impact performance.

Holding the trigger rotates the sear's business end away from the hammer's surface when the hammer cocks (just like when firing).

As Phil said, with a conservatively stoned sear, the theoretical wearing of material becomes a non-issue because it's a very small percentage of the total sear face (unless you want to baby your equipment :D )

If you choose to save-the-sear, it seems that the only legal way to do this is to perform the step before you’ve inserted a loaded magazine. If you load your mag, hold the trigger and chamber a round, you've just had your finger inside the guard when loading.

As IPSCDRL said, Rule 10.3.11 reads: "Failure to keep finger outside triggerguard during loading or unloading"

Did I get that all right? :wacko:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...