I don't dry fire as a practice, most likely wont hurt anything but there's always that chance. Except to disassemble my Beretta Nepal, it has to be dry fired to remove the firing pin to clean it.
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Ran into this same thing just the other day at a shop..eased the hammer down on a 1911 and dude was telling me to go ahead and dry fire it because it'll wear the sear faster if you don't or something..I was curious myselfI dry fire most of mine but never the .22's...
I was handling a Kimber 1911 in a gun store and after working the action I lowered the hammer down easy and the clerk (1/2 my age) scolded the hell out of me saying that you must dry fire the 1911 or it will wear out something or another???
Now I have no idea but I'd appreiciate someone clarifying this for me...
I never dry fire cause there always loaded,and that leads to holes in the walls,and I dont wanna have to hang another dam picture to cover it.
I doubt it, save with the rim fire cartridges. "Dry firing is bad for guns" is a hold over from days gone by...similar to "Pluto is a planet."I dry fire mine whenever the urge hits me. Well all but the. 22's
Can anyone provide me with physical proof that it has damaged a gun?

