Glock Handbook. Erik Lawrence. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Erik Lawrence
Издательство: Ingram
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Спорт, фитнес
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781941998489
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      CHAPTER 2

      GLOCK SPECIFICATIONS

      TYPE: Semi-automatic pistol

      COUNTRY OF ORIGIN: Austria, 1980

      DESIGNER: Gaston Glock

      MANUFACTURER: Glock GmbH

      SERVICE LIFE: 1980-Present

      FEEDING: detachable box magazine

      SIGHTS: Fixed, adjustable, and illuminated night-notch sights

      Variants

      CHAPTER 3

      GLOCK INTRODUCTION AND CHARACTERISTICS

      Figure 3-1 Glock Pistol

      The Glock series of pistols began fielding as the standard service pistol of the Austrian Army in 1982. It was designated the P80 and is heralded as the single greatest evolution in pistol design since the Colt M1911 by John Moses Browning. The Glock line of pistols is legendary for its simplicity and reliability. They are employed by countless military and law enforcement organizations worldwide, and as of 2008, Glock has sold more than 2.5 million pistols in over 100 countries.

      They are recoil-operated locked-breech detachable-box-magazine-fed semiautomatic pistols. The only exception is the .380ACP variant using the straight blowback operation. They come in various calibers from .380ACP to .45ACP and sizes from subcompact with 3.46” barrel to the long-slide 34/35 with 5.32” barrel. The now-discontinued G17L/24 had 6.02” barrels but was replaced by the abovementioned G34/35. Current production Glock pistols consists of 34 parts, which includes the magazine. For maintenance, the pistols disassemble into five groups: the barrel, slide, frame, magazine, and recoil spring assembly. The Glock uses a modified Browning locked-breech short-recoil operating system with a vertically tilting barrel. The barrel recoils rearward, locked together with the slide approximately 1/10 of an inch. This locked rearward movement allows the bullet to leave the barrel and pressure to drop to a safe level before the extraction of the spent case begins. A ramped surface at the bottom of the barrel engages a corresponding surface in the frame called the locking block. These two surfaces cam the barrel downward and unlock it from the slide as the slide continues to the rear.

      The slide has an external spring-loaded machined-steel extractor and a stamped sheet-metal ejector pinned to the trigger housing. The Glock uses a striker firing mechanism. meaning that the firing pin itself is spring loaded, and when released, is propelled forward using the energy from the striker spring and the inertia of the striker itself. The easiest way to remember the difference between striker-fired pistols and traditional semi-automatic pistols is that a traditional pistol has a hammer that strikes the firing pin, propelling it forward, where as the striker-fired gun has no hammer, but instead uses a spring and the weight and inertia of the striker itself. When the weapon is charged, the striker is in a partially cocked position. As the trigger is pressed to the rear, the striker is brought to the fully cocked position. At the end of its travel, the trigger bar is tilted downward by the connector, releasing the striker and firing the pistol. The connector also captures the striker at the end of the firing cycle and ensures the pistol can only fire semi-automatic. The exception to this is the select-fire G18.

      The Glock has redundant safeties that secure the weapon against accidental discharge. The three safety mechanisms are an external trigger safety and two automatic internal safeties. The internal safeties are a firing pin safety and a drop safety. The external safety is a small inner lever contained in the trigger. The firing pin block is a solid hardened-steel pin which, unless the trigger is pulled completely to the rear, blocks the firing pin channel, stopping it from striking the primer of the cartridge. The drop safety guides the trigger bar on a safety ramp that is only released when the triggered is pulled completely to the rear. The safeties are disengaged in succession when the trigger is pressed to the rear and then automatically reset when the trigger is released.

      CHAPTER 4

      LOADING AND UNLOADING

      LOADING

      1.Lock the slide to the rear.

      2.Inspect the chamber, magazine well, extractor and ejector for debris and damage.

      3.Seat a magazine into the magazine well until it locks securely in place.

      4.Release the slide, either with the slide stop (recommended) or by grasping the slide, drawing it slightly to the rear and then releasing it all together.

      5.Press check by slightly retracting the slide so as to witness a round in the chamber. Newer models Glocks have an extractor that is flush with the slide when the chamber is empty and raised when a round is present.

      NOTE

      If the slide is locked to the rear, there is no need to slam the magazine in place. The act of slapping the magazine is reserved for when the slide is forward and the top round in making contact with the bottom of the slide. The slap is necessary to overcome the pressure exerted by the magazine spring via that top round. Slapping the magazine can often cause a malfunction by jarring loose a round from the magazine and creating a double feed or other stoppage.

      When releasing the slide by grasping it and drawing it to the rear, the “slingshot” method, release it completely and allow it to go forward under its own spring tension. The pistol was designed to function reliably at the velocity the slide drops from the slide release.

      CLEARING YOUR WEAPON

      1.Remove the source of feed (magazine).

      2.Lock the slide to the rear, allowing the round to eject, and then inspect the chamber, magazine well, extractor and ejector*.

      3.Ride the slide forward, point the weapon in a safe direction (preferably at a target), and pull the trigger. Always think safety! The “T” Tyson clause- Make it a habit to double and triple check that your weapon is clear any time there has been a long pause since the last time you checked it or if there is any doubt in your mind of the status.

      NOTE

      It is advisable to inspect the extractor and ejector because these parts are the two most common ones to break on the pistol, and it will force you to inspect the magazine well area more closely, thereby making it far less likely that the pistol was inadvertently left loaded or not properly cleared.

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