How To Clear A Jammed Handgun
Okay. Now that we've performed the function test, what I'm going to do is what we consider a clearing drill or malfunction drill. What'll happen often times when you shoot a lot of when you're shooting multiple rounds or a lot of rounds, you get fatigue. Sometimes your grip may loosen up a little bit. You get what you consider maybe a limp wrist where your wrist starts to fluctuate up and down. When it does that motion. We'll clear this weapon again visually and physically. Make sure there's nothing in it. As you fire your weapon over time, your arm starts to get fatigue. What happen is you start doing this kind of motion. You're allowing for this kind of motion because you're tired. Instead of being rigid, you start doing this. Once you do that, that movement here doesn’t allow the slide to come back in the cycle with the same amount of force it's designed on that spring to make it operate properly. What you get often times is a stovepipe where it fired the round, it's trying to eject it but it can't. What will happen is you'll see something like this, which is considered stovepipe. Obviously, this is a live piece of ammunition, not in the firearm that way where it can actually injure anyone. This is for demonstration purposes only. This is what is considered stovepipe. The only difference is there will not be a projectile in here because this is already expelled. If I was limp wristing, it would try to eject that round, but it would get it caught in the ejection port. What we have is a function test tap rack bang, or tap rack asset bang. What that means is if I'm on the range and I'm firing and firing and I see that, first thing I can do is I can tap the bottom of the magazine to make sure it's seated properly. Rack means you grab the slide and rack it to the rear; you pull it to the rear. I rack it to the rear, which is just through that round and out of there.