Jiggling rounds in the cylinder

zxc

New member
I hope Im not the only one-but is anyone else bothered by the jiggling sound made by 5 38+Ps in the cylinders when moving double time? Is this dangerous from the AD standpoint? said rev is M49 in a cheapo left hand IWB Bianchi, left groin area. Wondering if the KT P11 is better in this regard.
 
My P-11 mags rattled when partially loaded with 8 or 9 rounds when they were new. Don't know if cleaning them or using them cleared it up, but they're now clack free.

Yes, that would bother me. I don't like extraneous noises that sound like click and clack....
 
I wish!!!!

Only thing I hear when moving double time is the wheezing,,,, through the blood pounding in my ears. :D
 
Hello? .38's? Cylinders??

I can not get cartridges, loaded or empty, to rattle in my revolvers without loading sub caliber rounds! In my admittedly limited knowledge of and experience with revolvers, they don't rattle when fully assembled and closed. Where is there clearance for enough movement to produce a rattle?
 
zxc,
I've noticed this rattling, too. It looks to me like it's the free movement back and forth, not side to side, of the rounds. The rounds on the left side, in particular, are free to slide in and out of the chambers just a little bit, where the backstrap of the revolver frame is slanted out to allow you to easily close the loaded cylinder. It just looks like a feature of the design, and a sign that your chambers are clean enough to allow your brass to slide back and forth easily. I can't imagine anything dangerous coming of it
cw
 
Yeah, I hear the clanking of brass too ... always figured is was my brass *(*&)^%%^_ making the noise. Talk about spent brass ... :D :eek: :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :eek: :D

Cartridges in revolvers rattle a bit too.
 
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Salty - Uh, okay.


Huck - The cartridges in most revolvers will rattle back and forth a little due to the small amount of head space clearance. There should be little or no rattle from side to side. If you don't hear any rattle at all, then your gun is very tight, maybe even too tight since some space (.001 to .003) is necessary to allow for expansion when the gun is hot - could cause difficulty in closing and/or rotating cylinder. Slight variations in case dimensions can account for more or less rattle also.
 
thanks all. The rounds rattling in the cylinders is what concerns me.Ruger does the same but with the weight its mostly a car/house gun now. Am crazy enough to do sprints with the Bodyguard,luv it.
 
*click* *click* *click*

(Coronach pulls loaded S&W 640 out of his ankle glove, holds it up, pointed in a safe direction, finger off trigger, and jiggles it slightly back and forth)

Mine rattles too. I'm not worried by this.

Mike

PS yes, I actually did just what I wrote.
 
Self correcting with time.
Older you get, the quieter everything is.
My cartridges quit ratteling bout 50 years ago.

NO...they are not going to go off while you are jogsprinting.

Sam
 
Cartridges in revo's do move side to side a little bit, if they didn't you wouldn't be able to load them without carefully (and totally straight) slide them in.

If there weren't any clearance, I would't have to resize the brass either. Granted it's very small, probably not the main cause of noise.. but they do move side to side.
 
Uh is that what that noise is? :confused:


(kidding of course)

Never worried about it before, don't plan to start now...
 
Yorec,
not the rattling noise, its the possibility of AD that Im worried about. Something about primer, loaded powder column, metal, skin, movement..getting ahead of myself there. I shall worry not anymore after reading these lighthearted responses. Thanks.
 
Unless you have a round with a high primer...
And smack the gun really HARD...
Not going to go off by themselves.
And probably won't go off even then.

To get ignition: You would have to deform the primer enough to crush the priming compound between the primer face and the anvil.

Not to worry.

Sam
 
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