![]() ![]() When in the fire position, the seer-loc safely keeps the bow from firing/releasing the string if no arrow is present. The positive manual safety overrides everything in the safe position. There is no need to recock or reset the ADF. Just move the manual safety back to safe, load an arrow, move the manual safety to fire and shoot as normal. If you were to attempt to fire the bow without an arrow, the trigger will not move. When the positive manual safety is in the safe position, it will not fire with or without an arrow loaded, period. As long as there is no arrow loaded, the seer is locked, it will not fire. The operator needs to move the manual safety to the safe position immediately after cocking, before attempting to load an arrow. Maybe auto-safety is not the right term, but it automatically safely locks the seer from releasing the latch claws/string even if the manual safety is in the fire position and one were to try and pull the trigger, UNTIL an arrow is loaded. They are not even an anti-dry fire, they are an anti move the safety to fire, and can be manipulated (either accidentally or on purpose) to fire without an arrow present. ![]() ![]() Some (Barnett) will allow you to move the safety to the fire position with an arrow loaded, then if the arrow was removed, it will actually let it dry fire. These systems need to be reset after that by recocking and resetting the ADF. Most are reactive (Excaliber, TenPoint), will allow you to pull the trigger without an arrow present, and it merely catches the string, or (old Scorpyd) impedes full latch claw release. It will not allow the trigger to be pulled. If there is not an arrow loaded, it will not fire or release the latch claws, even with the manual safety in the fire position. It is proactive, unlike its predecessor, and most others that are reactive. ![]()
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