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Accidental dry fire.
I was working on my bow i just got. A friend of mine gave me an old release he had and I was checking it out. Now I know why he gave it to me! I pulled my bow back and it released just as i reached full draw! I checked everything on my bow and it doesn't seem to have hurt anything. The limbs are fine. I know this isn't the healthiest thing to do, but it was an accident. Do you think its still fine?
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RE: Accidental dry fire.
Not giving you a hard time but I never draw my bow back unless I have an arrow nocked. Check your cam axles and take it to a pro-shop.
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RE: Accidental dry fire.
I would have it checked out at a pro-shop just to be safe. Never draw a bow without an arrow ([..censored..]happens).
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RE: Accidental dry fire.
I'd at LEAST shoot it at a target a few times if at all possible to make sure it is all in working order. I don't know a heck of a lot about the potential problems that can come from dryfires, but I know it ain't good.
Oh, and throw that release in the garbage! |
RE: Accidental dry fire.
Unfortunately, BTDT.
Although there was no damage I could see, when I brought it to the shop my axles were bent. |
RE: Accidental dry fire.
Whoa.... what kind of bow is it? From what I know (and what I've read), the older bows get destroyed pretty bad from a dry fire. New bows (last years, this years, etc...)can pretty much withstand it without a problem. But not all the time - you know what I mean...
I accidently did a 1/2 dry fire on my Reflex Highlander when I first got it. Scared the living $*@& outta me! I didn't even use a release. I was checking how smooth it was to draw with my fingers. When I was coming back down from full draw (roughly about 1/2 way back down), somehow the string slipped and the bow went, "Slap!!". No harm done. Nothing bent, broken, or flew off. I took mine to a bow shop and they looked it all over and gave me the old "you dumba**" kind of look, and said there was nothing wrong, but to always be careful next time. It could have been far worse...I would take it to the bow shop and have them check it all over. Good luck!!! Butch A. |
RE: Accidental dry fire.
well it was actually about a 1/2 dry fire. I got it to full draw, and was letting it off when it released. Its a pretty new bow. Its a Martin Tracer LT. Its no more then 2-3 years old. I havent shot it. yet, but honestly dont think it hurt anything. I'll shoot it and get it checked before this weekend. I swear, i might as well have wrecked my damn car. i'd probably feel the same way i felt when it released. I know drawing it without an arrow nocked was stupid, but on a brighter note, if an arrow was nocked, I'd be explaining a hole in my wife's wall. [8D]Thanks for all your replies on this matter.
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RE: Accidental dry fire.
"DO NOT" try to fire the bow again until you take it to a prowhois fimiliar with your brand of bow...
Iaccidentally dry fired my bow a few years back, and it looked ok. But I took it to a tech and he showed meboth limbs got a hairline crackon the endsthat wentthrough to the pinhold on my cams. If I had tried to fire that bow again,the cams could have came offand the bow flew apart at around 60-70# of pressure behind it. Could be seriously hurt! |
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