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Speargun Trigger Safety Importance

Thread Status: Hello , There was no answer in this thread for more than 60 days.
It can take a long time to get an up-to-date response or contact with relevant users.
yes you are absolutly right , but you can only control yourself , not everyone else
i had been pointed for over 10 times , everytime the reply were the same "dont be panic, my safety is on!"
it was like it was my fault.....
 
Sea water is an harsh environment, the safety mechanism will fail at any given time. So you need to handle the gun like it doesn't have a safety, so the only purpose of that mechanism is to be on when your trophy passes in front of you. that is why lot of people simple glue the mechanism. Even i go if the hook for an octopus inside its den i unloaded the gun, i wouldn't trust in a lose loaded gun near me and an octopus even with safety on.
 
That is really important, you just point an loaded gun, even with safety to something you don't mind to kill. If someone wants to just video tape something like a marine mammal or a sea turtle simple unload it.
 
The faiiled atempts of shooting with safety on is the main justification why the safety isn't really a safety, because it can happen the way around. The safety being off while the spearo thinks that is on.
 
The latest "Avatar" handle from Ermes Sub has a safety incorporated in the DR trigger mechanism which blocks the top of the trigger. The US is a very litigious society and speargun accidents can result in court battles for damages, so the manufacturer no doubt thought it was a wise precaution with the US being such a large market. In Australia spearguns used to be a legal afterthought, it was years before they came to the conclusion that a pneumatic speargun was not an air rifle and should be treated separately. I endured long correspondence with a government department before this was sorted out after initial battles with Customs to bring in some pneumatic spearguns. The fact that Mares, Cressi-Sub and Nemrod guns of similar layout had been sold here for decades did not cut much ice as the left hand did not know what the right hand was doing in terms of the weapon definitions. Rather than open a can of worms the question of spearguns has not been examined too closely here which is to our advantage. While the sport stays out of sight and out of mind it can continue by not making any waves. That includes not having speargun accidents.



"F" is fire and "L" is lock or load as in cock the bands. The trigger mechanism will not accept the spear tail being pushed in if the lever is set to "L" as for the relatch the trigger needs to move as the nose roller on the sear lever pushes it forwards at the top.
 
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