One thing in my course we never seemed to get much into depth about is your firearm jamming, I would like to know about this before it happens to me and how to go about dealing with it safely, I have seen a few videos on youtube, and plan on taking a few courses which cover this, but I was hoping to run it by someone with more experience to be sure I have it down pat before it happens in the mean time, I guess you could say I prefer the cautious approach and to be prepared.
From what I have seen with a semi-auto handgun, if the spent casing is hung up on the slide and another round is not chambered you simply need to keep it pointed in a safe direction, pull back on the slide, removing the stuck casing and chambering a round from the mag, if the casing is still in the chamber with another round trying to chamber, you smack the bottom of the mag with your other hand while pressing the mag release, and pull the mag out which should empty the chamber and have the stuck ammo fall out, then rack the slide 3 times to be sure all ammo has been removed. Is this about it, or is there more to look into? I have heard of some using a multi tool to pry the ammo out of a really bad jam, is this also acceptable? I would hate to damage my firearm doing this
Is there ever a case where a jam is so bad that your unable to get it out, if so what is the procedure for such a thing? You cannot take it to a gun shop since its technically a loaded firearm for transport.
I ask simply because I was watching some toughest soldier show some time ago, and a guy with extensive training and education on firearms had a jam in his 1911 and had considerable problems clearing it, so being very new I am curious to hear some input.
I did do a search but it kept coming up with "found no results" so I do apologize if its been covered and I missed it, I did have a look however.
From what I have seen with a semi-auto handgun, if the spent casing is hung up on the slide and another round is not chambered you simply need to keep it pointed in a safe direction, pull back on the slide, removing the stuck casing and chambering a round from the mag, if the casing is still in the chamber with another round trying to chamber, you smack the bottom of the mag with your other hand while pressing the mag release, and pull the mag out which should empty the chamber and have the stuck ammo fall out, then rack the slide 3 times to be sure all ammo has been removed. Is this about it, or is there more to look into? I have heard of some using a multi tool to pry the ammo out of a really bad jam, is this also acceptable? I would hate to damage my firearm doing this
Is there ever a case where a jam is so bad that your unable to get it out, if so what is the procedure for such a thing? You cannot take it to a gun shop since its technically a loaded firearm for transport.
I ask simply because I was watching some toughest soldier show some time ago, and a guy with extensive training and education on firearms had a jam in his 1911 and had considerable problems clearing it, so being very new I am curious to hear some input.
I did do a search but it kept coming up with "found no results" so I do apologize if its been covered and I missed it, I did have a look however.