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Member |
Your reactions are all the same as mine. What?! I would imagine the collective knowledge here is about 1,000 collective years of Glock usage experience, and it seems like a one in a billion chance. When I read the article, I immediately knew where I was going to post it to see the reaction to this "defense." Fortunately, I do not represent this agency, or I would have been on the horn to the Chief asking for the real story. | |||
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Member |
Yup, that's about the size of it. Effed up and looking for a booger-bear to blame it on. Hell, we all do it. Cuz it's embarrassing as hell. | |||
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posting without pants |
I wont' go so far as to say it isn't 100 percent impossible... but my "skeptical meter" is pegging at a really high level.... Strive to live your life so when you wake up in the morning and your feet hit the floor, the devil says "Oh crap, he's up." | |||
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Member |
Almost as good ad the magic AR15 http://www.thetruthaboutguns.c...o-remains-a-mystery/
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For real? |
Jeez. Not this again. Cop screwed up, plain and simple. We've had some NDs during qualifications and it's always the officer's booger hook. Handgun and rifle. Not minority enough! | |||
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"Member" |
Well just in our small sampling of people who posted in this thread, we have two people who've seen the pins come out. I suppose you'd need a combination of that, a tight fitting kydex holster, a light trigger, bad luck and maybe pushing to hard or fast? Anything is possible I guess. I've seen guns to things that don't make sense. _____________________________________________________ Sliced bread, the greatest thing since the 1911. | |||
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Member |
I spent some time this afternoon experimenting with the triggers on several Glocks. In each case, the position of the trigger safety pin had to be past the frame before the striker tripped; if the pin were extended far enough to lose the trigger safety insert, it could be pushed aft until it contacted the frame, and would prevent the trigger from being pressed far enough to discharge the weapon. Additionally, if the pressure were on the extended pin, movement of the pin would be in excess of the trigger, now allowing the trigger to move far enough aft to discharge the weapon. If someone has exchanged the trigger return spring for a lighter weight, or incorrectly installed the spring, it's possible for the trigger to not fully reset far enough to engage the trigger safety insert, allowing the trigger to be depressed without need of the trigger insert. The G40 I just picked up was that way; light spring and improperly installed, and the trigger didn't come far enough forward to engage the trigger safety. It strains credibility, however, to suggest that the pin backed out far enough to catch on the holster, and then was depressed far enough to discharge the weapon, when the pin backed out actually prevents the trigger from being depressed enough to do that. | |||
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