I thought this was a silly question. Glad I read it, I do the same- use to keep it loaded all the time, then started unloading it and storing it on a daily basis. Good to know!
I thought this was a silly question. Glad I read it, I do the same- use to keep it loaded all the time, then started unloading it and storing it on a daily basis. Good to know!
Mine is loaded 24/7. On me or off in the safe at night.
I do try to do a quick cleaning by weekly, only because I'm involved with metal shaving, and unload at that time. Usually unload the mag and blow it out also. Reload everything, rack it, drop the mag, top off, and reinsert.
I do double the chamber every other day or so when I holster in the morning. Just for mind reassurance.
I'm glad I read this too! I didn't know doing this could make the bullet go back and cause a blow up! May have to just keep it loaded all the time or do something else.
Great more idiots with loaded guns at home![]()
The Great Kazoo's Feedback
"when you're happy you enjoy the melody but, when you're broken you understand the lyrics".
This is why all my immediate go to guns are S&W revolvers. Always loaded, pull trigger, always go bang. When I carry my Browning, condition 1.
"If everyone is thinking alike, then somebody isn't thinking."
George S. Patton
"A people that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both."
Dwight D. Eisenhower
"Conformity is the jailer of freedom and the enemy of growth."
John F. Kennedy
?A motorcycle is a bicycle with a pandemonium attachment, and is designed for the special use of mechanical geniuses, daredevils and lunatics.?
George Fitch. c 1916.
Actually if you measure the bullet, then run it through the gun a few times depending on the original length in relation to chamber, most of the time it pulls the bullet out of the brass due to catching on the lands. And if the barrel is dirty you will see the marks on the bullet. I used to unload a lot to run snap caps and what not and started measureing the bullets when i had the same question.
The repeated chambering can also damage the priming compound, causing it to come loose & your gun to go click instead of bang. Personally I'll load a round twice, marking it each time, and on the third loading it gets shot.
With an AR the floating firing pin can also damage the primer & cause the same click-not-bang problem.
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