Do You Need Snap Caps For Dry Fire Practice?
BY Herschel Smith1 year, 1 month ago
Dry firing is one of those controversial subjects upon which everyone seems to have an opinion. I am a big proponent of dry firing handguns and rifles, particularly when using my Wall Drill to improve. It also helps sustain trigger control and sight alignment as a collective rather than a separate effort. Dry firing against a wall keeps the eye on the front sight through the pull of the trigger, which maintains follow-through, allowing detection and correction of deficiencies in the foundational skills of shot delivery.
With the exception of rimfire revolvers and revolvers with the firing pin mounted on the hammer, I see no hard and fast reason that snap caps are needed to dry-fire your revolvers. That said, there is certainly nothing wrong with using them in either of your revolvers just to be on the safe side. If you want a second opinion, I recommend contacting the manufacturer of your firearms and see what it has to say. I suspect the manufacturer will agree with my suggestion, but there is always the chance it will have a different perspective. I would support the manufacturer’s opinion in that manufacturers usually know more about their products than individuals not in their employ.
Although snap caps and dummy rounds are often lumped into the same category, they are slightly different in nature.
Dummy rounds are available in different colors and can be made of metal or plastic in the external dimensions of a specific cartridge. Typically, they have a solid base or occasionally a hollow opening where the primer pocket would be located.
A subset of a dummy round is the action-proving cartridge, which is loaded to the external dimensions and weight of live ammunition, but is without propellant and is visually identifiable from live ammunition. Its purpose is to validate proper feeding, chambering, extracting and ejecting of ammunition through a semi-automatic firearm.
Dummy rounds are also used as a diagnostic tool when interspersed with live ammo in a shooter’s magazine to detect deficiencies in shot release. When the shooter pulls the trigger on a dummy round, the gun should not move any more than it did prior to pulling the trigger. If additional movement of the gun is experienced, there is work to be done to improve shooting performance.
Snap caps differ from dummy rounds in that they have a rubber or spring-loaded mechanism located in the base of the cartridge to cushion the impact of the
firing pin when the trigger is pulled.A snap cap provides something for the firing pin to contact, like the primer in a live cartridge. In fact, the snap cap is intended to replicate what the firing pin experiences when firing live ammunition.
This is important in older firearms, especially shotguns, because without something like a primer to impact when the trigger is pulled, something must absorb the energy generated by the released spring tension powering the firing pin. This could be internal metal parts or springs, all of which will fatigue over multiple impacts. This fatigue often leads to broken parts and failure of the gun to function properly.
Older firearms, especially shotguns, should be stored with snap caps in place, enabling the springs driving the firing pins to be relaxed by pulling the trigger(s) prior to being put away. Think of it in this manner: The firing pin is designed to impact a primer, which stops its forward movement when firing a gun. The snap cap provides the same feature in stopping the firing pin with the addition of a little “give,” similar to indenting a primer.
In addition, snap caps are generally brightly colored to distinguish them from live ammo, which helps to maintain the separation of live ammunition and the gun especially during storage and dry-fire exercises.
It is always good to have a few snap caps of the appropriate caliber or gauge in your range bag for dry-firing or storage purposes. Such a simple piece of gear can really help take your training to the next level.
I have to say, I won’t drop the hammer on a rimfire revolver or semi-auto handgun without ammunition being chambered. But as long as the firing pin isn’t banging on anything, I have never worried about that with either a rifle or shotgun.
I also won’t drop the hammer on an AR-15 while the upper is off of the lower (for obvious reasons). Grab it and gently let it fall.
Comments or observations?
On October 2, 2023 at 10:46 am, scott s. said:
I would say in the precision pistol world it generally is accepted wisdom to always use snap caps.
On October 2, 2023 at 8:17 pm, The Wretched Dog said:
Herschel: I do not understand your comment: “I won’t drop the hammer on … a semi-auto handgun without ammunition being chambered. But as long as the firing pin isn’t banging on anything, I have never worried about that with either a rifle or shotgun.”
What is the engineered difference between a semi-auto handgun and a (semi-auto) rifle?
TWD
On October 3, 2023 at 11:43 am, Latigo Morgan said:
I don’t dry fire my black powder revolvers, for obvious reasons – you can break the nipples.
I’ll dry fire everything else, except the Browning Buckmark – the owner’s manual specifically states not to dry fire. Every Ruger rimfire I have, the owner’s manual says dry firing is okay.
Centerfire pistols and long guns? No problems over the years, except for normal wear and tear that would have occurred anyway.
On October 3, 2023 at 3:43 pm, Ozark Redneck said:
I use this dry fire mag. Here is the link; https://www.dryfiremag.com/
I have a couple, mainly use for my edc guns. I would agree with others, I don’t dry fire the 22’s. Really not a need to, as these are my fun guns. I try to dry fire every night, using the dry fire mag.