eric76 said:
BusterAg said:
Ulrich said:
aggiehawg said:
Ulrich said:
I wonder if they are using a revolver with a very light trigger pull (aka hair trigger) and that's part of what led to multiple accidental discharges.
If a gun has that type of trigger, it should be taken out of the props available for use on set. If it can be repaired, fix it before it is available for use again. That would apply to the very first unintended discharge.
Reporting is that there was at least one and maybe two other such incidents. If the above did not happen, it is gross negligence on the armorer's part and negligence on her employer's part. The circumstances surrounding her hiring might also constitute a negligent hiring cause of action. How did she get that job?
On the gun, the hair trigger doesn't seem to me to be a complete no-go. People own and use guns like that safely every day. They were common in the old west and behave slightly differently, so they might have done it for verisimilitude. But if they were repeatedly firing it accidentally, the training was at fault. They were probably handling it without the proper care.
So far based on what I've heard, it sounds like mixing ammunition, an inexperienced armorer who may not have felt like she could tell Alec Baldwin and company what to do, and general lack of respect for gun safety were at fault.
There is no such thing as a revolver with a hair trigger.
When you pull back the trigger on a revolver, the trigger cycles the cylinder in the revolver, putting the next round in the cylinder in position to fire. This takes significant pressure from the shooter, as they have to work against the spring that keeps the round in the correct position after a successful cycle.
This is usually between 12 and 15 pounds of pressure. A hair trigger is anything less than 2 pounds of pressure. HUGE difference.
Now, you could cock the hammer by hand, cycling the cylinder, and the gun could accidently go off with no more than a hard bump or a drop. But, no one should be carrying a revolver around with a cocked hammer. That shouldn't be done until you are pointing the gun at the direction it is going to fire.
So, this excuse is completely bogus in my mind.
Clearly, a hair trigger would apply to a single action revolver, not a double action revolver.
90% of revolvers are both single and double action.
In a double-action only pistol, you cannot pull the hammer back and cock it. Only the trigger pulls the hammer back.
On a single-action only pistol, the only way to fire it is to pull the hammer back by hand, and then pull the trigger. You can also "fan the hammer" with the trigger down. The trigger cannot prepare the hammer to fire.
In almost all revolvers, the trigger is double action, but you can also pull the hammer back and cock it, making the gun single action.
In any case, the only way to have a "hair trigger" on a revolver is if the hammer is already pulled back. There are zero reasons that a hammer should be pulled back on a gun that has any rounds in it (blanks or live) unless you are preparing to fire.
Again, this argument is irrelevant.