As I look at hammer pistols - watching the slide go forward - the hammer is held back by the slide, then the hammer falls just a little to be held by whatever sear arrangement the gun uses. The difference in the actual speed of the hammer from dropping the slide empty or chambering a cartridge is small.
Now looking at striker pistols - the slide is going very fast forward when the striker is snagged and held back as the slide finishes closing. Normal functioning of a striker fired gun - shooting - is very abusive of the mating surfaces - many times more abusive than any hammer gun.
Dropping the hammer from full-#### and catching it on half-#### would be similar to normal use on a striker gun.
Each style of semi has it's own impacting, mating surfaces that take the smack of the slide hitting home - maybe some can't take much - let's find some old beat-up rental guns and get some pictures of the peening.
Now looking at striker pistols - the slide is going very fast forward when the striker is snagged and held back as the slide finishes closing. Normal functioning of a striker fired gun - shooting - is very abusive of the mating surfaces - many times more abusive than any hammer gun.
Dropping the hammer from full-#### and catching it on half-#### would be similar to normal use on a striker gun.
Each style of semi has it's own impacting, mating surfaces that take the smack of the slide hitting home - maybe some can't take much - let's find some old beat-up rental guns and get some pictures of the peening.




















































