Flapjack94 said:
theloneassassin said:
AgentNein said:
Being totally not a gun nut, it still always annoys me (in movies) when people cock back a hammer before they shoot someone (usually the intent seems to be to add a bit of tension to the scene). Correct me if I'm wrong, but don't modern day guns cock the hammer themselves? Which is why after that initial shot they're not cocking back the hammer with every subsequent?
Also, normal guns having the power to lift people off the ground and knock them back. I'm not a gun nut, I just understand basic physics.
Yeah, cocking back the hammer is not needed for modern pistols because when you pull back on it to chamber the round it automatically cocks the hammer, and usually the pistol is all ready to shoot as soon as you pull it out and pop the safety off.
that's more for an internal hammer (that's your glocks). External hammers (like Beretta 92, H&K mark 23, 1911, a lot of sigs) pull back when you chamber the round, but you can decock it for safety. then gotta pull the hammer back, but the round is good to go once the safety is off. But yeah you can cock it just by pulling back the slide. I find a lot of movies miss the chambering step, might just be my inattentiveness.
1911's are only fired in single action mode, after each subsequent shot the firearm cocks itself via the recoil of the slide.
Sigs are a Double Action/Single Action firearms. Glocks are striker fired, and pretty much entirely different.
OT: I guess there is a big misconception about how DA firearms work, SA firearms work and DA/SA firearms work.
Let me put it this way. A Single-Action firearm has to be cocked for each round it fires, these are generally hammer fired. I.E. manual cocking. M1911
Double action firearms cock themselves when the trigger is pulled, so pulling back the hammer is unnecessary. H&K USP
Double action/Single action weapons are awesome. The first round the initial trigger pull cocks the weapon and fires it. The subsequent rounds are in single action because the recoil of the slide cocks the firearm. Sig Sauer P226, FNP-9
I'm not doing the best description of it, but they are very different in the way the firearm functions.
Rifles are a completely different story.