Glock out of battery?

Mattp33

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Hi, I feel very new all the sudden. What does it mean when your semi auto hand gun goes out of battery?

It sounds like maybe the chambered bullet gets shot before the barrel has had a chance to line back up?

Is this right?

Searching for knowledge

Thanks
 
no, it's when the round goes off BEFORE the bolt is locked- ie a projecting firing pin will do it- before the locking lugs on the bolt are engaged in the chamber ; the term "in battery" means that the breech is closed, the bolt lugs are sitting in their respective grooves- ie locked up, so that the bolt head is supporting the rear of the round, and the chamber is supporting the rest
 
Ohhh I get it! Crapy google would not find anything but the thread here about the guys FN blowing up

Thank you!!!
 
and it CAN happen to any gun, not just glocks- there's a rather nasty video on here somewhere of an old 305 that fired "out of battery"- as a rule, it DESTROYS the gun, and leaves the shooter BADLY INJURED
 
just make sure that the firing pin TRAVELS FREELY in it's channel- it's a RARE occurance, nothing to be afraid of- i've never had it happen, and that's 42 YEARS of shooting-just when you clean it, make sure the firing pin retracts- when it does happen, there;s usually an underlying cause, like crap holding the pin forward, or grease, or something
 
I had the firing pin of a SIG 229 get stuck in the forward position about 3-4 years ago. In hindsight, I'm glad nothing too dramatic happened.

How it happened was... there was this particular line of Fiocchi ammo that had these gold coloured primers that would pull apart and look like they had almost melted. The pieces of them were turning up inside the guns in different places, and outside the gun too. I had gone through the whole box with two different guns (SIG 229 and my old P7 PSP) by the time I realized something had happened. Gummed up the firing pin channels of both of them.

P7 is very easy to get the firing pin out. Simple clean-up job of the firing pin channel, breach-face, etc. The SIG 229... to get the firing pin out you have to knock out the cross-pin... and you should be using the proper "cup tip" punch to avoid making a mess of things. I didn't have those tools back then. Long story (gunsmith).

So... if you fear an out of battery kaboom (and who doesn't?) checking and cleaning the firing pin channel and the breach face regularly is probably a good idea. With some guns... GLOCK's and HK P7's come to mind... it is very easy to get the firing pin out. Other designs require knocking out a pin with a punch, which I wouldn't recommend doing too often. Probably the better way with these guns is to regularly function test the firing pin. Will it push forward easily and come back easily?

With that FN in the other thread, I don't think it is a stuck forward firing pin. Some have suggested it could even be another round (although the guy said it was the last round that kaboom'd), or a sharpe corner in the design of the firearm. I know that may sound far fetched, but from watching the SIG armorer's DVD I learned that SIG started angling off the right angle at the bottom of the breech face due to an incident which occurred with a Chicago Police officer's gun (in the 1980s or early 90s I think).
 
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