I am working to migrate THR from the current cluster to a new one. I would like to get this done before the weekend, but it's unclear what the timeframe will be, as testing is still ongoing. As I am writing this the new (rebuilt) host is doing a burn-in to ensure that everything will keep running under load.
When the migration happens users will see a Cloudflare message indicatating it cannot connect to the server. This is expected, and depending on how the migration goes this may last from 30 minutes to 3 hours - I won't know more until testing the various migration options is complete and I have finalized the plan.
More information is available in this thread.
As always, thanks so much for your patience.
I don't know how fast it would have to go, but I've seen tests done where they dropped a glock out of an airplane and the gun wasn't destroyed. I don't much care for glocks, but they sure can take a beating.
It's not a 5.5 lb trigger pull anymore when the STRIKER is also moving to the rear by inertia.I really don't see how the trigger could gain enough momentum to overcome the 5.5 lb trigger pull. I would imagine that the gun itself would be destroyed from such an impact considering the speed it would have to gain for that small polymer trigger to gain 5.5 lbs of force for the full length of travel on impact.
I haven't tested this, but I agree. The mass of the trigger isn't sufficient to overcome the mechanical disadvantage it's at and fire the weapon if dropped from a reasonable height. I don't think it would fire if the "dingus" (my pet term for the lever) were absent and the weapon were dropped from an unreasonable distance, say 30 feet.I really don't see how the trigger could gain enough momentum to overcome the 5.5 lb trigger pull. I would imagine that the gun itself would be destroyed from such an impact considering the speed it would have to gain for that small polymer trigger to gain 5.5 lbs of force for the full length of travel on impact.
It's not a 5.5 lb trigger pull anymore when the STRIKER is also moving to the rear by inertia.
And it's also not just the small polymer trigger mass to consider. Unlike most DA/SA handguns, the trigger doesn't pivot around a pin, pulling the trigger bar forward. The trigger and trigger bar both move backwards, together. So you have to add the mass of the trigger bar, too.
I saw a youtube vid of a guy doing this to "prove" his dingus-free Glock was safe. He dropped his gun onto concrete from waist high a few times. He managed to ding up his aftermarket rear sight and push it all the way to the right. After this one test, he declared victory.I would like to remove the dingus from a Glock, load a case with nothing more than a primer in the chamber then drop it a bunch of time from no ore than 10 ft to see if it goes off. My gut still says it won't. Perhaps if you dropped it from 30+ feet it would.
Take a rubber hammer and strike it on the back of the slide, The gun will fire. If you don't think it will tell that to a friend of mine when his Glock fell out of his holster hit on the rear of the slide and wet off. Just mised his private parts and went out his back.
I suggest getting the book The Glock in Competition and read page 15. The gun well fire when hit from the rear when the trigger safety is removed. You never hit the gun from the rear all of your drops were on the side.
The ND poll on this forum strongly suggests that this type of ND is extremely rare. In fact, the presence of an external hammer is way more dangerous, due to the sheer number of decocking ND's that are reported. Sure, you could say all those decocking ND's are avoidable. All you have to do is leave a SA gun cocked and locked. Or use the decocker on a DA/SA (when it has one). But you could turn around and say all those shirttail ND's are equally avoidable using your God given ability to see and to feel foreign objects in a holster. And in the end, the statistics show what they show.I do not believe it to be the SAFEST design. Consider this-A double action/double action only hammer fired pistol. While reholstering or handling, if you want to be sure it isn't going to go off, put your thumb on the back of the hammer and hold it forward. It isn't going to fire unless that hammer comes back first. These guns also typically have a drop-safety on the inside as well, so any pressure on the hammer isn't being applied to the primer unless the trigger is pressed. A glock could be inadvertently fired upon reholstering if clothing gets pinched in the trigger guard and edge of the holster, and you would not have an absolutely sure way of feeling that about to occur.
None, IMHO. I guess we can all imagine a scenario where a piece of shirt grabs the trigger somehow and "pulls" it when the gun is pressed down into a holster; but such rearward movement of the trigger is prevented by the trigger-face lever. Seems like a vanishingly rare problem.What kind of accidental discharge is the trigger safety on a Glock supposed to prevent?
That must be it; the silly trigger "safety" didn't even earn Glock a single extra "import point" from BATFE.It was part of the original design as it address the military specification of inclusion of a safety which is manually disengaged before the pistol will fire.