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If it is a spring pistol it won't have any recoil. According to the specifications, the UHC 1911 Spring Airsoft pistol has an unloaded weight of 1.25 pounds.
Semi-automatic firearms, such as the 1911A1 pistol use a spring to help absorb some of the recoil energy, and use the energy to reload the pistol.
Not all guns have a recoil spring. In the case of guns like the 1911A1 .45 cal pistol, when the gun fires, the slide is driven back by recoil (kick). The recoil spring is compressed, stops the slide from moving back, and pushes the slide forward for the next shot. Is does not make the gun recoil less.
Mine doesn't. Possible problems - magazine, magazine spring, ammunition, limp-writsting, recoil spring.
The M9 pistol works on the principle of short recoil operation, whereby the force of the bullet leaving the weapon cause the slide to move rearward and out of battery to eject the spent shell casing and strip a new round from the magazine through the force of the recoil spring.
Best left to a gunsmith.
Drill a small hole at the end of the recoils plug that goes in the spring. compress As much spring as posible and slide a paper clip in hole you drilled which will keep spring compressed. Slide spring into hole and push recoil plug as far into hole as possible before pulling paper clip. Slide rest of spring in now and drop bolt in before releasing spring.
Typically a recoil spring absorbs SOME of the energy from a weapons recoil and also resets the firearm's components (chambering a round, hammer, etc...) to allow the firearm to be shot again.
Recoil spring
At least moderately well. It is a recoil operated semi auto pistol. Parent gun was the Tokarev TT-33. The trigger releases the hammer, strikes firing pin, firing primer. Recoil of bullet being fired makes slide recoil, extracting and ejecting fired case. Recoil spring stops slide, reverses movement, picking up and chambering a fresh cartridge.
sounds like either a broken recoil spring or a bad clutch
It wouldn't be advisable. The recoil spring is an essential component of the operating mechanism, and, in many rimfire rifles, is also instrumental in keeping the bolt carrier on track. Using your firearm without this recoil spring leads to serious risk of damage, and the possibility of personal injury.