Dry-Firing a PCP Rifle??

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Never had an issue with my M3 and I dry fire at way higher pressures than most here. (190 bar) I do maintain the parts on my gun as they wear though too.
I broke mine by dry firing it without pressure. The stuff I've read says that without pressure to work against it, the hammer bounces off of the back of the valve assembly too hard, and damages it. This was in the manual: "Never fire the rifle when it is empty of air or when air cylinder is removed!" Unfortunately I had stopped paying attention when it said, "Never attempt to disassemble this rifle!"
 
I broke mine by dry firing it without pressure. The stuff I've read says that without pressure to work against it, the hammer bounces off of the back of the valve assembly too hard, and damages it. This was in the manual: "Never fire the rifle when it is empty of air or when air cylinder is removed!" Unfortunately I had stopped paying attention when it said, "Never attempt to disassemble this rifle!"
Yeah, I always have pressure when I do it. I used do it the most when I was in my testing phase and to get an idea of where the 2nd reg setting would settle. I could also get an idea of how many bar I would lose per shot with the settings I had.
 
I am on my 1st PCP rifle, an FX Impact, and since I am a throwback to the springer days, I am wondering if it is safe to dry-fire a PCP gun.

And if not why, because there is no piston slamming against the breech face like in a break-barrel springer
I'm glad you asked this question, I've been doing some research on purchasing an Impact and was thinking the same thing.
 
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