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2007-08-10 03:46:38 · 16 answers · asked by lecroy99 1 in Sports Outdoor Recreation Hunting

16 answers

Yes it is bad to do and if you have done this by error please take you bow into a professional bow tech for complete inspection for damage and tuning before you use the bow again if not and the bow looks shootable you may cause by shooting again the bow to fail and it can cause very bad injuries to you!

2007-08-10 18:06:19 · answer #1 · answered by Injun 6 · 0 0

Yes...It's bad to dry fire any bow. Especially compound style hunting bows. If dry fired you will not only damage it, but in some instances I've seen the pulley's fly off track and disintegrate, and the cable whipped up into the shooters face causing horrible deep cuts and gashes. There really isn't any logical reason to dry fire a bow in the first place. It serves absolutely no purpose. If you need to check a release or see how hard it is to pull back and anchor, do it outside and don't ever let go of the string unless and arrow is properly knocked. Let it down slowly and you will be fine. Let it go and you are setting yourself up to break your bow beyond repair and open yourself or those standing close to you to a world of hurt that could be prevented.

2007-08-10 04:11:48 · answer #2 · answered by JD 7 · 3 0

Yes it's bad to dry fire a bow. My question is, why would you even want to dry fire a bow. That's no fun anyway.

2007-08-10 08:56:43 · answer #3 · answered by bowhunter59 1 · 1 0

Dry hearth is undesirable for any bow, longbow, recurve any of them. each and all of the potential saved interior the limbs could desire to circulate someplace whilst the string is permit circulate. If there's no arrow or bolt, the potential can purely circulate back into the limbs. If a bow is mild sufficient it incredibly is dry fired thoroughly, yet mild sufficient is under 5 lbs, we've a bow that mild especially made for prepare type prepare. As to what proportion situations? it incredibly is like asking what proportion licks to the middle of a tootsie pop, noone is widely used with. maximum present day recurve or longbow won't explode on basically one dry hearth, compounds could have themes with the string coming off the wheels and a few such.

2016-12-15 11:07:33 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Yes, it can shatter your bow and you could get seriously injured as well. My fiancee and I went to a supposedly reputable store to look at bows one time, and the salesperson dry fired the bow. The only thing he said after that was let's get out of here honey.

2007-08-13 18:39:34 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The sales people will love it if you dry fire your bow, especially if it is a compound bow.

It has a good probability of ruining your bow, voiding the warranty, and causing you to need to buy another bow.

2007-08-10 04:07:00 · answer #6 · answered by Doc Hudson 7 · 2 0

Never dry fire a bow.

2007-08-10 06:49:24 · answer #7 · answered by 1970 3 · 2 0

yes, the arrow absorbs the pressure that is put on the limbs when the string is released, so by dry firing it you take a chance on damaging (which might be unnoticeable until its to late) or cracking the limbs which will definetly result in damage and possibly injury, also do not leave the bow in heat (like overnight in a car) because the string will strech

2007-08-10 03:51:34 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Yes! It's super bad! You can shatter the bow if you pull garbage like that!

2007-08-12 14:15:34 · answer #9 · answered by zwijn 3 · 0 0

Uh yeah.....

If you just have to fire it for some reason (practice or whatever) use a wooden arrow with a blunt tip and make sure you are shooting at something safe (ground or target- dont be stupid about it.)

2007-08-10 03:57:16 · answer #10 · answered by coolhandven 4 · 2 0

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