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[–] KnifesEdge 1 point 10 points (+11|-1) ago 

You should have been training with bad ammo so it produces situations like this.

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[–] StagOfMull 0 points 4 points (+4|-0) ago 

Buy "range ammo"

Cheap shit you can fire a lot.

Have 'defensive/offense ammo'

High quality ammo that is well manufactured and reliable.

Now you know how to deal with malfunctions and jamming and don't have to worry about it happening because of the high quality rounds... but if anything does jam or malfunction, you know how to clear and can do it effectively.

Also use a timer with your training. Preferably one with a loud beep, that beep increases stress considerably, which is good for practice and conditioning.

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[–] VAT 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

I bought loose novice bags of reloaded brass (which jam on occasion) for target practice and unjamming practice.

for defense I have nothing but the most expensive overpriced stuff in half filled magpulls

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[–] hang_em_high ago 

Think I’ve only had one malfunction with m183 out of several thousand rounds. You really shouldnt have issues often at all

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[–] elfmaster5 0 points 7 points (+7|-0) ago 

but that one malfunction WILL happen at the most inconvenient time.

[–] [deleted] 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago 

[Deleted]

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[–] ManchesterT 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

Think I’ve only had one malfunction with m183 out of several thousand rounds

I sold my AR and bought an AK. Never saw a malfunction again.

Later found out this is par for the course among AK owners-to shoot the thing for years, and have zero malfunctions of any kind.