Gun Safety: Do You Dry-Fire to Show Clear?

BY Herschel Smith
2 years, 8 months ago

Outdoor Life.

It’s a common sight to see someone pull the trigger on the rifle, shotgun, or pistol they just emptied, whether they are finishing up at the gun range or jumping in the truck after the evening deer hunt. The intent is to confirm that the gun is clear. But is that safe gun handling? Or is it a pointless risk?

I think the answer depends on what you’re doing. But I do know some hunters and shooters click their trigger every single time—and that’s not the right approach.

Before getting into those less-than-safe scenarios, let’s talk about when it makes sense. At every 3-gun, multi-gun, or handgun competition I’ve attended, the standard procedure after finishing a stage is to unload the pistol by pulling the magazine, racking the slide, and pointing downrange and dropping the hammer. The Range Officer managing the stage watches this process to verify that the blaster is clear to his or her satisfaction. The same procedure holds true for showing that a long gun is clear.

At a gun range, you can point the muzzle at a solid backstop. If you do produce a negligent discharge when attempting to show clear, it isn’t going to cause any problems other than a potential stage or match DQ. I’ve witnessed this myself and recently saw a video of shooter at a match crank off a round in front of the range officers after pulling the magazine and racking the slide repeatedly. Obviously, he had a round in the chamber that the extractor didn’t engage (perhaps the extractor had broken) and when he dropped the hammer the pistol went off. The fact that he had an utterly safe backstop to shoot into is what prevented it from being a dangerous situation.

Now out in the wild, the safety of the backstop becomes relative. When you’re exiting your deer stand or hopping into your truck, is it possible to have a backstop as certain as the berm at a rifle range? Sure, in theory. In practice, you won’t have that every single time.

With that in mind, dropping the hammer becomes a risk-reward scenario where it’s often better to not pull the trigger.

Years ago, I discussed this issue with Jim Carmichel, my predecessor as Outdoor Life’s shooting editor. He was firmly in the “don’t dry fire to show safe” camp. “What is it you’re trying to prove?” he said. Good point. You’re trying to demonstrate that the gun is empty—but if it isn’t you just opened a whole can of worms for you and everyone who might be around you.

Some shooters have argued with me that they’d rather have the negligent discharge happen then, rather than risk carrying or transporting a gun they thought had a clear chamber but didn’t.

My problem with this logic is that it ignores the first rule of gun safety: Every gun is always loaded. If someone hands me a firearm I don’t care if they just field stripped the thing and put it back together to show it is empty—I’m still going to check it myself. We shouldn’t consider any firearm, even the deer rifle that just went “click” in your buddy’s hands, any safer than one we just found on the side of the road. To ignore this is to become complacent, and when handling firearms, complacency kills. (It also ignores the second rule, which is to keep your finger off the trigger until you are ready to shoot.)

The article goes on and you can read the rest at Outdoor Life.

Here’s what I do, and readers can weigh in as well.  This is an interesting subject and one that I’ve thought about before.

I’ll normally empty the chamber of any gun (rifle, pistol or shotgun) by removing the magazine and cycling the slide (or action) several times.  But here’s the next step.  I visually examine the chamber to ensure that it’s empty.  This is an absolutely essential step for me.  And then I do a self-check of my judgment.

I normally carry the firearm home with the action open and the spring tensioned.  I don’t see a problem with that.  It also lets me self-check my visual inspection as many times as I want.

But I don’t store the firearm with the action open and springs tensioned.  We’ve had this conversation before, but springs undergo creep.

Do not make the claim that stainless steel (like SS304) doesn’t suffer creep below the yield limit and at low temperatures.  Yes … it … does  (“In all tests at applied stress/yield strength ratios above 0.73 some plastic deformation was recorded”).

No offense, but don’t try to be an engineer if you’re not one. If you make the claim that SS304 (I presume the material of most magazine springs) doesn’t suffer from metal creep, you’d be wrong, and then you’d also be answering the question the wrong way.

The right way to look at the question is one of whether the creep is significant.  It usually isn’t, and it is less significant than for carbon steel.  It’s also not significant for applied stress/yield strength ratios lower than what the authors tested.  Where your specific magazine spring falls in this data set is best determined by the designer, not me (I don’t have drawings or any other design information).

Gun springs are an essential part of the gun, and the gun needs to function every time I pull the trigger.  On the other hand, magazines can be replaced.  I don’t leave gun springs tensioned.  I de-tension the spring before storing the weapon.  That requires that I pull the trigger while having the gun pointed in a safe direction and after visually verifying again that the chamber is empty (since I only shoot hammer fired pistols, that’s an easy fix – I let the hammer slide down smoothly, and this is also an easy fix with bolt actions).  I don’t care so much about magazine springs.  And I don’t shoot striker fired pistols.

I know that this is done different ways for different people and that multiple strategies are advocated by shooters everywhere.  If there was one answer, there wouldn’t have been an article to begin with and no conversation necessary.


Comments

  1. On March 23, 2022 at 4:30 am, Nosmo said:

    I’ll agree that untensioning springs is a good idea. I do have a problem with the procedure, however.

    In all competitive events at the conclusion of a stage the RO demands (it’s not an “ask”) demonstration of the gun being completely empty of ammunition. Visually he – and the shooter – check the gun, then the RO demands the gun be dry-fired in a safe direction to prove it’s empty.

    No problem with any of that. But….the shooter will assume a firing grip, point the gun at the berm, then press the trigger in exactly the same manner as if firing a live round.

    Repetition training produces predictable results; in this case, we are allowing ourselves to be trained to perform a normal firing operation to confirm the gun is completely unloaded. Sooner or later a failure will occur.

    Maybe I’m a bit nuts about it, or maybe just enough OCD, but I switch the gun to the other hand, hold it upside down and use a non-firing digit in the first hand – the pinkie finger – to press the trigger and drop the hammer. It’s completely unnatural to do that, which is what I’m trying to achieve – I do not want to train myself to confirm fully empty, at any time, in any situation, by performing what is a completely normal firing operation.

    I’ve suggested replacing the post stage dry fire operation with insertion of a chamber flag with a sufficiently long tail to extend past the chamber, which would work at the end of the stage. There would still be the dry fire issue at some point, however, when the gun is stored for post match transport or at home.

    YMMV.

  2. On March 23, 2022 at 6:55 am, Ambiguousfrog said:

    A solution looking for a problem? It’s never phased me to make sure my pistols are clear firing down range before I transport them in their case to home.

  3. On March 23, 2022 at 7:52 am, Dave Hubley said:

    In my opinion, visual confirmation is always best. Another good reason for carrying a high quality flashlight maintained with good batteries. It may be getting dark when you need to check for clear. Once the firearm discharges, it round IS going to go until it is stopped by SOMETHING. Best it never goes in the first place.

  4. On March 23, 2022 at 9:25 am, Fred said:

    That’s what caught my attention; no visual inspection. Depending on the weapon, not only do I visually inspect, but I stick my finger in the chamber for tactile confirmation. As far as a cleared and “cocked” weapon goes, I just point the weapon at something I’m “willing to destroy” and squeeze the trigger.

  5. On March 23, 2022 at 11:11 am, Red Man said:

    AFrog nailed it. Infantry training at Ft. Benning decades ago taught to clear the rifle, point the muzzle downrange, pull the damn trigger. Done! As far as the stupid argument that there may not be a solid backstop, aren’t they standing on the ground??

  6. On March 23, 2022 at 11:24 am, RCW said:

    The range (NRA insured) where I RSO’ed strongly suggested using ECI (empty chamber indicators), which were ~2″ x 3″ yellow plastic flags w/ a 4″ mast, placed in the chamber after opening actions & removing mags and a visual confirmation. Further, NO uncased firearms (incl. uncasing) were to be touched during a cold line, when shooters were down range, with one exception: ECIs on single-action wheelguns were placed in an empty cylinder chamber after emptying, with the loading gate open.

    These rules, regulations, policies, procedures, etc. were applied while using pistols, rifles, scatterguns on all ranges but archery and all events, competitive & friendly.

  7. On March 23, 2022 at 11:28 am, RCW said:

    Oops I wasn’t clear. There were no exceptions to touching firearms on a cold line. The exception was to open actions on single-action wheelguns. Sorry.

  8. On March 23, 2022 at 1:24 pm, scott s. said:

    In bullseye aka Precision Pistol we would never dry fire on an empty chamber. For safety purposes ECI is required. The never-ending safety argument was about holding the trigger back while closing the slide (supposed to protect the sear).

  9. On March 23, 2022 at 2:02 pm, Ross said:

    RCW nailed it. As an NRA Instructor and retired Army officer, visual inspection is NOT the “next step”, it’s part of cycling the action after dropping the mag. If you never allow exceptions, you are far less likely to have accidents.

  10. On March 24, 2022 at 7:46 am, George said:

    There is no better way to prove and unloaded gun than to cycle the action and dropping the hammer on an empty chamber. Holster, live well and prosper

  11. On March 24, 2022 at 12:56 pm, Matthew said:

    I was taught to depress the trigger while closing the bolt on my Model 70. This decompressed the spring without putting wear on the firing pin.

    But that always follows careful visual and physical verification that the rifle is unloaded.

  12. On March 24, 2022 at 2:56 pm, Robin Datta said:

    How about a thick stiff wire like the kind used in wire-net or barbed-wire fences secured inside a cartridge casing, and sufficiently long so that the front end sticks well out of the muzzle?

  13. On March 24, 2022 at 4:51 pm, Herschel Smith said:

    I assume that’s a joke. I’d never stick something like that in the barrel.

    But a chamber flag is a good idea.

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This article is filed under the category(s) Firearms,Guns and was published March 22nd, 2022 by Herschel Smith.

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