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🔫 Elevate Your Training Game with Steelworx Snap Caps!
The Steelworx22 LR Steel Snap Caps Dummy Rounds (12 Pack) are designed for safe and realistic training, featuring precision stainless steel construction that mimics the dimensions and weight of real ammunition. Perfect for practice, these dummy rounds allow for safe loading, firing, and misfiring, making them an essential tool for any serious shooter.
| ASIN | B07X1ZS5JG |
| Best Sellers Rank | #141,097 in Sports & Outdoors ( See Top 100 in Sports & Outdoors ) #603 in Ammunition & Magazine Pouches |
| Brand Name | Steelworx |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (1,762) |
| Date First Available | December 29, 2018 |
| Item Package Dimensions L x W x H | 2.8 x 1.89 x 0.35 inches |
| Manufacturer | ecoMIM |
| Material | Stainless Steel |
| Package Weight | 0.04 Kilograms |
| Suggested Users | mens |
E**N
These SNAPS are good. Made in the USA.
Greetings Amazon Readers, This is a review of "Steelworx 22 LR Steel Snap Caps" (ASIN B07X1ZS5JG). My name is David and I am a law abiding gun owner living in Southeast Florida. I have a Heritage Mfg. Inc. Rough Rider .22LR/.22WMR (two seperate cylinders) Single Action Only (SAO) six-shot revolver that is essentially a rough clone of the venerable 1872 Colt Single Action Army (SAA) revolver. Once in awhile I will show a friend how to safely handle a SAO revolver with a potentially not-so-safe safety, like the Heritage Rough Rider. So I went looking for some .22LR SNAPS (dummy rounds) to use with the gun for this purpose. After looking at the many options on Amazon I decided to try the all stainless steel Steelworx .22LR SNAPS made in Amherst, NH (ASIN B07X1ZS5JG). A pack of twelve Steelworx SNAPS today costs $13.99 USD ($1.17 each). Who knows what the price will be in a month? (These days I cannot even predict the price of a carton of eggs a month later). The SNAPS were were all well made and worked perfectly in the Heritage revolver. The real reason for needing the SNAPS is to show how to load the SAO revolver with what I call the one-zero-four (five-of-six rounds total) method. So after loading the gun, in the end you are always left with an empty chamber under the hammer. This is necessary because the Heritage Rough Rider has a cam-driven manual safety, which makes it possible for the user to disable the safety entirely, which is a dangerous condition, especially if the gun is being transported. In contrast, the gun can be equipped with a more modern transfer-bar safety; but that costs more money, and is far from the legacy Colt SAA design which is desired by some vintage-style gun users. And and heck - where's the fun in that? At some point I intend to post a YouTube video (or something similar) on loading the SAO revolver using the one-zero-four method. It's actually very simple, just skip loading the second chamber and when you are done rotate the empty chamber once so it is safely under the hammer. Conclusion: These Steelworx .22 SNAPS are a good buy - quality Made-in-America and they won't break the bank. I endorse this product 100%.
O**K
If there's a better actual snap cap for .22 LR guns, I'd like to hear about it.
I looked at all of the options to allow safely dropping the firing pin for .22 LR guns, finding that there are various other options that have inherent shortcomings. The likes of the A-Zoom dummy rounds are soft aluminum that are actually dummy rounds totally unsuited to even one or two firing pin strikes because the aluminum will quickly break up into little pieces and get into the works of the gun. The hard plastic ones by Tipton and others, as well as the softer plastic ones by other manufacturers also don't stand up to firing pin strikes, quickly cracking and often getting particles of plastic into the gun. The ideal solution is a true snap cap designed to allow several firing pin strikes and feed through a magazine normally, serving as a function testing dummy round. Contrary to what several reviewers here claim, these Steelworks snap caps are not entirely composed of monolithic hard stainless steel, but are instead composed of stainless for the body of the cap, with the rim composed of a much softer stainless only a bit harder than a brass case for live .22 LR ammo. This allows the firing pin for my 1952-vintage High Standard Sport King to safely drop and leave a tiny dent in the rim of cap each time. I have no damage to my firing pin, so I'm guessing that the guys claiming that these caps damaged theirs either had already done that damage unknowingly by firing on an empty chamber, or their firing pins are of inferior quality and way too soft. Keep in mind that even these snap caps are bound to eventually wear out, but I'll guess that each one will easily stand up to about 100 snaps before the rim gets sufficiently deformed to warrant it being discarded and using a new one in its place. The main reason that I bought these is to allow me to shoot my Sport King, which lacks a bolt hold-open feature once the magazine empties, to prevent the inevitable unintended firing pin drop on an empty chamber after the last round is fired in the magazine. I can confirm that these snap caps are so close to the size and shape of live .22 LR ammo that they do exactly as I intended each time, sliding right into the chamber after the last live round is fired and allowing the firing pin to be safely cushioned each time. I now make it normal loading procedure to load one of these into my magazine first, then fill up the magazine the rest of the way with my live ammo. I intend to keep the elegant little Sport King in excellent shape for a long time to come, and these snap caps are just what I need to keep it that way.
J**N
Wont cycle in antiques.
I collect antique pump .22's. I bought these to test functionality of new antiques I aquire. They would not feed through any of my antiques while live ammo will. I believe it is because they have a small flat on the nose which causes them to hang at mouth of the breach. However, they do cycle through my newer rifles (1980's and newer). I ordered some different ones with a round tip. These are fine for most people I think, they just don't work for what I need.
A**R
The best 22lr snap caps
These are so much better than anything I've used so far, they have a softer metal where the firing pin strikes, you can see a slight indentation on them after you use them but just slight, I have used just one for at least 50 dry fires and to it is still fine, I'm guessing it will take hundreds of uses if not thousands before you wear them out. I have tried aluminum, plastic, combination of aluminum to and plastic and they last anywhere from 2 or 3 to maybe around 20 trigger pulls before they fall apart with the aluminum lasting maybe 20 at most before becoming too deformed to be used, not to mention plastic or aluminum pieces falling into your gun, these hold together put have just enough softness to metal to protect your firing pin, bonus is they load great every time and also replicate the weight of the real bullet, I've given to members at my shooting club and they are like to wow they don't fall apart like everything else they used, I was not paid to write this or given any promotional things, just trying to help fellow enthusiasts, you will love these, if you don't send them back but I highly doubt to that will happen, good shooting!
T**.
Best .22 snap caps on the Market!
Been using snap caps in all of my firearms for the last 17 years. Of all the .22's I've tried these are the absolute best, bar none. Here you will see I have a variety of .22lr handguns for you to see. These arent all of them just the ones I've been playing with the most lately. The firearms pictured are the Ruger Mark III, Taurus PT-22 PLY, Chiappa 1873-22, and H&R 922. These snap caps easily load into any of these firearms. They reliably fed into the Mark III without any problems, 100% reliably. The only firearm that had some trouble was the Taurus PT-22 and that's due to it's shallow feed ramp as you can see from the photos. If you own or have handled a Beretta 21A it's about 1/3 the depth of that firearm so it can be finicky about what it feeds. I've dry fired with each of these firearms about 6 times per round atm. There is only two striker marks on one and a single striker mark on another. These things are solid and they'll last you for years in my humble opinion. This is an amazing feat seeing that most other .22 snap caps on the market are not even good enough for one training session. I would recommend you pick these up whenever they are in stock. They are well worth it! Enjoy and carry on!
T**N
Best Snap Caps Available!
I always discharge my guns before I store them so the firing spring is not stored compressed, as I had an issue with a firing spring in a 22LR Rifle failing due to being stored compressed. The manufacturer of that rifle made me send the complete rifle back for repair which was a big pain. After that incident several years ago I started buying snap caps for all my 22 rim fires. Plastic was the material of the day. I noticed that with a little bit of age the snap caps would become brittle and break at the edge of the rim. By this time snap cap technology had advanced to aluminum for the material. This was great! However I had started shooting steel competitions every weekend and noticed that the aluminum had a life span in regards to the number of firing pin strikes it could take around the entire rim of the round. I dealt with this for years, until now. Snap cap technology has taken yet another turn along with rimfire firing pin technology. I know that some 22 rim fires can be discharged emply as the firing pin material has changed and been upgraded. This currently is only in effect for SOME of the newer 22's out there today. Mine are all older and require the use of snap caps. The ones that I have more recently bought are this set of Stainless Steel snap caps. I have to tell you, I think this is finally it, perfection has been achieved, These are heavy duty and strong enough the take a firing pin yet without deforming the snap cap and since they are made of stainess steel they are softer than the existing firing pin steel making them a safe bet for long term useage. I have been using these for several months now with minimal signs of wear on them. I highly recommend these to anyone looking for the best quality snap cap out there.
U**E
Good training for loading magazine
Well made, true to dimension dummy round. I used them as snap caps and ruined my Buck Mark 22 firing pin. I had used them during winter to train and unfortunately found out at shooting competition with every 3 round was a dud. Saw light strike on the casings later to find the damage to firing pin. In this respect I do not really have a need for these if I can't use them as snap caps.
H**W
Great for rimfire
Dummy rounds should never be confused with blanks or live training rounds. These faux cartridges are perfect for malfunction drills and dry fire exercises because they lack the dangerous boom components. Specifically, the primer, propellant, and explosive charge. I like the fact that they are metal and have a soft cushioning cap for your rimfire firing pin to hit. For years, I was always afraid to dry fire my rimfire weapons but at the same time is not the best practice to leave your firing pin compressed. Finally, I bit the bullet, no pun intended, and got 12 of these. Not sorry I opted for this brand, and now the firing pins of all my 22's are happy.
X**N
Well made, not for all mags, but can use them
Well they work, but not feed all that good in my Magazine as it is the Magazines issue, but thats ok as if all ur doing is dryfire u can use 1 at time or just one over and over. Now they are a tad longer then a normal round but its ok 1 at a time or using 1 over and over. Edit: i bought 2 new magaizines From a different Manufacurer, these work flawlessly in them no issues at all.
V**L
Very well made and will last long
Those are the best snap caps I've every seen for rimfire. Very well made, good material, smooth surface, right dimensions. The material is hard enough to withstand many strikes, but soft enough to not break a striker. Every shot leaves a small dent, but you can tell that each snap cap can take many dozens if not many hundreds of shots before it couldn't be used anymore. The price is very reasonable too. Very happy with this purchase.
J**D
Damaged firing pin damaged
These actually cycle nicely from magazines and work well from that end which is exactly what I wanted. However, after a couple hundred dry firings they completely mushroomed my firing pin. The rifle is a Bergara B14R, purchased new in February 2024. Maybe the Bergara firing pin is soft, I don’t know, but mine is now completely inoperable.
A**M
for center fire rifles only
Solid built and good weight to them. Cycled well through action. But note these are for centre fire rifles only.
M**.
Doesn’t work in lever actions
The material and machining seem decent. They fit my magazine fed bolt action well. The only gripe is the rim is a hair bigger than a live round so they get stuck and don’t work with my Henry tube fed lever action. They get stuck in the brass spring tube and are a pain to get out. They also don’t feed well in the lever. They seem to fit the chamber fine though. Unfortunate because I really wanted these to work for training new shooters in lever action. Edit: they actually don't cycle in my tikka T1x. Tried to like them to support canadian business, but they are 1 for 3 of my rimfire rifles so i wouldn't recommend.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
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