yeah you can do it easy with a .22 and it really depends on the design of the gun, but for lets say a 9mm glock you're not going to want to position your skin anywhere near that slide, because no matter how hard you're pushing, it's gonna come back at ya.
It's not but the applied pressure will not be the same every time, nor will there necessarily be pressure applied every time. there's just too many variables to just blanket say yeah it's fine.
Yeah it's also the closest to actually being silent if you don't have a heart attack gun basically, it's the dimensions with the most kills under its belt. Just forget most of it's from .223 and not .22 hehe
Most likely cause of this is the use of subsonic ammo in the weapon. For weapons to be truly silenced you need to use this type of munition. Otherwise is just sparkling noise suppression. They tend to have lower loads (to stay subsonic) so in some semi-automatics the ammo doesn't produce enough
I can only speak from personal experience of actually doing this and what my friend who worked at a company supplying governments with these tools told me.
All of these pistols have beavertails in order to stop this from happening from a regular grip though? You don't want to be touching the slide of a gun when you're using it unless it jams, these are reciprocating parts, they will reciprocate right into your flesh.
Ah, get what technique you're talking about now. On the models I listed they have breech locking setting so you don't even need that and only hear the pin engage
I meant that they don't jam using sub sonic suppressed rounds. Almost no noise from mk 23, p226, fn 45, or vp9. Small noise from m9 or even m1911. Hell even a mk4 works,
If you're gonna do something I'm not endorsing, going cheap increases the rate of failure and accidents
Comments
We were shooting guns into phone books in a Vegas hotel room, laughing quite a bit.
Required zero effort to hold it.
Standard 22lr ammo.
We didn't use 9mm for safety reasons, being in a hotel.
Skip to 1:10
https://youtu.be/o8WU1auVZGw?si=AduGe8lRtMC10lVa
Bad example IMHO.
Friend said the .22 were s most used though for "retirement" because it's soft target ops and easy to use reg ammo without need for sub sonic rounds.
Standard nato.
Nothing at all like a .22LR/magnum.
Waaaaay different.
Manually stopping the action of any weapon is not, to my knowledge, a thing.
I can only speak from personal experience of actually doing this and what my friend who worked at a company supplying governments with these tools told me.
Ymmv, fdic, omgwtfbbq.
He had 6 all threaded for silencers a borrowed for the DC shoot, in a slick demo case and all that.
He said "put your thumb on the back". I did and it was just "thwip" sound of the phone book.
"that's how the pros do a hit"
*shrug*
The Tldr takeaway is that this guy is not some lone wolf kid mad about his dad's cancer treatment rejection.
I mean it could be and they fucked with the wrong family, but this is a wet work operator.
Three letter agency or a PMC contractor.
If you're gonna do something I'm not endorsing, going cheap increases the rate of failure and accidents