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Quick Noob Question: Charging Handle
Hey guys, just had a sporadic curiosity question:
Do you know of any AEG's (or even GBB rifles) that chamber when you pull the charging handle back? On my AEG sometimes (might be all the time, haven't really been paying full attention to be honest) the first shot of a fresh mag is a dry-fire and it kills me to hear it. Anyone have a way to get around this/know of an AEG that does not do this? Thanks for the response in advance. |
I dont think any AEG can do that. I think GBB rifles do I think
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GBB rifles do this, if I am not mistaken. All of the GBB armalites, to my knowledge, do this.
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Anyways, any gas guns are much more realistic, in terms of having to chamber the initial round to fire. Be it pistols or rifles. AEGs are just more practical. |
GBBs do that, AEG's do not, though your first shot should be a bb unless your spring was compressed (bad for gun if left like that in storage)
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Your first shot shouldn't be a dry fire unless the mechbox is partially cycled. As the mechbox cycles, the sector gear pulls back the tappet plate, which pulls back the nozzel allowing a BB to load. If it dry fires, it means the sector gear has already passed that point when it started cycling -which can only happen if the mechbox is partially wound.
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Mine does that, only because I use a very powerful battery, so it always over-turns a bit every time. You could possibly remedy this by using a sector clip.
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I'm 90% sure it shouldn't be doing that.
If you take a look at how it works is that once you load the mag into the magwell there's a thing that pushes back that thing blocking the bb's form getting pushed out. So once you load the mag in, the BB's will get pushed out of the mag by the spring into the chamber to fire. The only reason it would dryfire is if there's something blocking the chamber. There's a gif of an AEG and how it works below: http://www.airsoftretreat.com/galler.../vidfingif.gif Basically the only reason why it would dryfire the first round is if the black thing right there is blocking the chamber meaning that you're spring is half compressed when you are loading the mag which causes it to block the stream of BB's. Sorry for the long winded explanation (I'm sure I've repeated the same thing but in a different way) but yeah basically, make sure the spring isn't compressed when you load your mag and it shouldn't dryfire on you. |
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Also, there are 2 parts where the nozzle is fully forward and the first shot will be a dry fire. The first part is at a half cycle, the second part is right at spring decompression. If the gun doesn't have a mosfet there may be a small chance that the sector gear stops right after spring decompression and the tappet is fully forward. This is pretty rare though as gear momentum usually pulls the tappet back. It could happen on full auto however, which is why you dry fire a few times after mag removal. |
Oh no I know it won't fix the overturning. I just mean it'll probably let the nozzle stay back long enough that it will still feed.
Only real way to fix the overturning (permanently) is to get a Mosfet with active braking. |
I havn't.. =p
just work it out by sound, and it works perfectly. Which is the whole reason why I havn't gotten one in fact =D |
Geeze, everytime I post a question I am assaulted with knowledge.. which isn't a bad thing. Thanks guys for clarifying this, I guess I'll just have to settle for my AEG for gaming and have a GBB on the side. As for the dry-fire, yeah it turned out to be a half-cycled shot. I realized after I read that post that before the mag had emptied, I had the selector on auto. Then after loading a new mag, switching it to semi, the first trigger pull was very light indicating I guess a half cycle. Thanks for clearing that up guys, really helps.
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