KarateHottie93
Member
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2017
- Messages
- 387
I've read a billion times about always pointing the firearm in a safe direction to decock it, because decockers can fail. Obviously that rule is common sense regardless of what you're doing but that's besides the point. I understand the reasoning people say it entirely.
The thing is that when it comes to internals, I really only know about the CZ decockers. I can't speak much on Sig, Beretta, etc. The CZ ones seem unbelievably safe though. So safe that I would call the mechanism fail proof if we were talking about anything other than firearms here.
I've spent hours upon hours trying to find one chink in the CZ decocker. I've dropped the hammer on my RAMI well over 1000 times now while trying to smooth out the action a bit. I simply see no room for failure. The only way I could even imagine it to be possible is if the internals were severely and obviously damaged.
Even then if the hammer did slip all the way passed the half cock position, you would still have the firing pin block.
Again I haven't really paid much attention to the mechanisms of other decockers, but the CZ 75 ones seem remarkably reliable.
Has anyone on here ever witnessed a decocker failure with any firearm...especially a CZ?
If so, has anyone ever witnessed both a decocker and firing pin safety fail at the exact same time and discharge a round?
The thing is that when it comes to internals, I really only know about the CZ decockers. I can't speak much on Sig, Beretta, etc. The CZ ones seem unbelievably safe though. So safe that I would call the mechanism fail proof if we were talking about anything other than firearms here.
I've spent hours upon hours trying to find one chink in the CZ decocker. I've dropped the hammer on my RAMI well over 1000 times now while trying to smooth out the action a bit. I simply see no room for failure. The only way I could even imagine it to be possible is if the internals were severely and obviously damaged.
Even then if the hammer did slip all the way passed the half cock position, you would still have the firing pin block.
Again I haven't really paid much attention to the mechanisms of other decockers, but the CZ 75 ones seem remarkably reliable.
Has anyone on here ever witnessed a decocker failure with any firearm...especially a CZ?
If so, has anyone ever witnessed both a decocker and firing pin safety fail at the exact same time and discharge a round?
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