carguychris said:
The MkII thumb safety only locks the sear, and there is no mechanism to prevent the firing pin from moving forward under its own inertia if the gun is dropped on the muzzle hard enough.
Doyle said:
Finally. Someone who has the mechanical speak to put it into plain english. Thank you. This is what I was talking about - although not just with being dropped but also with bumping around in the holster. With other pistol designs, there is still something besides a mechanical devise holding back a spring-loaded firing pin.
I appreciate the compliment about my writing skills, but I thought I was veering slightly from the original topic, or perhaps you're slightly mistaken about how a 1911 works.
Let me rewind a bit...
Doyle said:
I just can't carry around a handgun [such as a MkII] in a holster with a cocked hammer/striker and only a single mechanical safety. At least with a 1911 style you have both the thumb safety AND the grip safety.
Prior to the Colt Series 80, the safeties on a Colt M1911 series
only lock the hammer and sear. Neither the thumb safety nor the grip safety acts on the firing pin.
As with the firing pin in the MkII, the old-style Colt M1911 firing pin is
also free to move forwards under its own inertia. There's really not a fundamental difference in the safety mechanisms of these pistols other than the fact that the M1911 has TWO externally-actuated sear- or hammer-locking mechanisms rather than ONE.
Many decades' worth of articles in the gun press debate how hard of an impact it might take to make a M1911 fire and/or how truly safe this system is. There are numerous stories circulating about M1911's that discharged when dropped against a hard surface, although the particulars in these stories are often in dispute (e.g. whether the gun was modified and the storyteller purposefully obscured this; whether the shooter actually had an ND caused by sloppy trigger discipline and made up the story to cover his butt; etc).
Consequently, many M1911 fans are aware of this issue, although to say that
most shooters know about it is probably overgeneralizing.
However, it's worth noting that many M1911 fans are comfortable carrying a "cocked and locked" M1911 with a chambered round, despite the remote but known possibility that the pistol could fire if dropped.
Doyle said:
What besides the Ruger MK series are always "cocked and locked" when loaded?
aarondhgraham said:
Wouldn't that be pretty much any single-action with an internal or concealed hammer?
Yup!
The concept of a safety that physically locks the firing pin really got going with the original Walther PP series (the PP, PPK, and PPK/S,
not the PPS, PPQ, PPX and so on). However, the manual safety mechanisms in these guns- along with the P-38 and other early postwar DA/SA pistols such as the S&W Model 39 and Beretta 92S- only lock the firing pin when the thumb lever is on SAFE. The firing pin still can move forward when the lever is in the FIRE position!
Passive trigger-actuated firing-pin blocks didn't really start becoming common until the 1980's. This is why Glock has historically made such a big deal over having one; they weren't the first, but they got on board early, and stressed its presence due to the lack of obvious external manual safeties on the gun.