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PPN Family, it's time for the Prepper Tip of the Day.
Hello everyone out there in Internet Radio Land, this is Dave Jones, the NBC guy, with your Prepper Tip of the Day.
I'm in the office, you hear the squeaky chair?
Look, you got to dry fire your weapons.
What? Everybody tells me not to dry fire.
Look, they are mechanically designed to do 50 to 100,000 times firing.
Okay?
So, dry firing them is not going to wear out that mechanism trust me if you're not if you're not
going out every weekend and putting two or three hundred rounds through that weapon it is not going The utility that you are going to get from carrying it, drawing it, aiming, firing is way, way more important than trying to save that mechanism from being dry fired. Okay? And you can put a dime on the end of your barrel and keep
your sight picture and draw, I mean
slowly. Trigger control is what you want.
A monkey
can align the sights. Trigger
control is what you want.
You want to be able to squeeze that trigger.
Think about it.
It's the only moving part of the weapon,
that trigger.
Because once it goes through its mechanism,
that bullet is launched and gone.
You can't affect it anymore.
So you have to get trigger control down.
Whatever it is to pull that trigger.
And if you put a dime on the end of your barrel
and it doesn't fall off,
you're squeezing it, squeezing it.
It was an exercise that we used to do
with a revolver,
and we would do it in double action,
which means you pulled the cylinder,
rotated, and the hammer fell,
and the dime never fell off the end of the barrel.
So, dry fire away PBN family.
Dry fire away.
Get used to carrying your weapon.
However you're going to carry it.
Get used to the mechanism of it.
The reason the Israelis defense force is so good
and they send the weapons home with the people.
And they send the weapons home with the people.
You have to have the utility of carrying it, holding it, firing it.
You have to know what works and what don't work.
So that's my prepper tip for the day.
Do not fear the dry fire.