Snap cap
A snap cap is a firearm accessory device shaped like a standard cartridge/shotshell but contains no functional components, namely the primer, propellant and projectile. It serves the same purpose as a dummy round, but different in that a dummy is usually modified from a real cartridge with its propellant and primer removed, while a snap cap has a monolithic outer shell and is specifically designed to be a fake cartridge from the very beginning.
The term "snap cap" is a generic trademark of the fake cartridge originally introduced by American firearm accessory brand "A-Zoom", and is a word play on percussion cap. It is now used to refer to any accessory product made to perform similar function.
Description
Image:100 1090.jpg|right|thumb|A pair of 12 gauge shotshell snap caps with spring-damped fake primersA snap cap is used to ensure that dry-firing firearms of certain designs does not cause stress and impact damage to the firing pin and/or the barrel breech. Some snap caps contain a false primer that is either spring-buffered, made of rubber or soft polymer, or none at all. The springs or plastic will absorb the impact force from the firing pin during dry-firing, allowing the user to practice trigger pull or safely test the function of the firearm action without damaging its components.
Rimfire and a small number of centerfire firearms of older design should not be test-fired with the chamber empty, as this can lead to weakening or breakage of the firing pin and increased wear to other components in those firearms. In the instance of a rimfire firearm, dry firing can also cause deformation of the chamber edge due to the firing pin striking it without the cartridge rim in between. For this reason some shooters use a snap cap in an attempt to cushion the firearm's firing pin as it moves forward. Most commercial snap caps have a polymer/rubber false primer to receive the firing pin strikes, which is usually usable for up to 300 to 400 clicks. After that, due to the impact crater on the false primer becoming deepened from the repeated strikes, the firing pin does not touch and transfer its momentum, and the snap cap loses its cushioning effect. Some higher-end snap caps have a spring-dampened false primer that can last much longer, but are also more expensive to make.
Some snap caps are made of a soft aluminum coated with paint. Other snap caps are manufactured using traditional brass shell casings and injecting a polymer material, while others are made from a solid piece of plastic, including via 3D printing.