The Rohrbaugh Forum
Rohrbaugh Products and Accessories => Rohrbaugh R380 => Topic started by: C0untZer0 on May 09, 2011, 04:30:36 PM
-
I know its not recomended to fire the heck of the Rohrbaugh - what's the saying? Fire it a little carry it a lot... something like that.
I am wondering if the 380, since it is a lower-pressure round, stands up to more range firing. I am thinking of buying an R9 and training with both the R9 and the 380.
Is the trigger pull on the 380 pretty much the same as the R9?
I would think that it would be a good way to train for the R9, I'm thinking that on the weekend I would fire 50 rounds or so through the 380 and then maybe 14 rounds through the R9.
-
I think you are on to something there C0unt.
-
Maybe just buy another R9 and do the same thing your talking about, that way everything is exactly the same and 9mm ammo is cheaper and easier to come by. ;D
-
Just train with the R9; you'll get the hang of it; save some money! ;D
-
Re-read the OP guys.
His concern is not about recoil and such, it is about tearing up a $1,000 gun.
-
I know you're not going to tear up an R9 by firing it a lot; remember the R9 that has fired 5,000 rds with no problems; I do know the saying, shoot little carry a lot; but think that has to do with the shooter, not the gun. Most folks can't do much past 50 rds at a time; others do 150 or more.
-
Glad you pointed that out.
Now, maybe you addressed his concern. :D
-
Thankyou! ;D
-
C0untZer0:
As one who has used my R9 as an EDC piece for seven years now and "exercised" it regularly, I would suggest not being reluctant to practice with yours. Just use the recommended quality ammunition, allow it cool down a bit between strings of fire, clean it after each range session, and change the recoil spring every 200-300 rounds. The springs are inexpensive, and in a full-house 9mm pocket pistol weighing in at only a little over 13 ounces, they do a lot of work.
Although the R9 is not intended for range competition and is the "Ferrari of pocket pistols," it's one tough little gun.