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Post by rbglock on Nov 11, 2020 16:57:59 GMT -7
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Post by Admin on Nov 12, 2020 10:24:35 GMT -7
Tragic for sure, unavoidable, sure. I would be interested to know the experience level of the shooter.
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Post by rbglock on Nov 12, 2020 17:50:28 GMT -7
I was curious about what brand & model the gun was. Most of the newer stuff has some type of trigger or hammer block specifically for this type of accident.
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Post by jc91087 on Nov 13, 2020 13:23:24 GMT -7
I was curious about what brand & model the gun was. Most of the newer stuff has some type of trigger or hammer block specifically for this type of accident. Some of the most popular guns used in games don't employ firing pin blocks.
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larry
Junior Member
Posts: 63
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Post by larry on Nov 13, 2020 17:21:58 GMT -7
The article said it was a CZ shadow
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Post by rbglock on Nov 13, 2020 19:20:55 GMT -7
On the CZ website, I couldn't find information on a Shadow, just a Shadow 2. The only safety listed is an ambidextrous manual safety.
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Post by tom on Nov 14, 2020 14:06:15 GMT -7
The Shadow has no firing pin block or drop safety. It has an ambi-manual safety on the frame. Generally used as a Production gun, it starts hammer down, and so some hypothesized it was dropped as he went to manually decock the gun before holstering. That would lead to a light-trigger/high-probability-of-all-safeties-are-bypassed situation if it dropped at that point.
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