- SurvivalBlog.com - https://survivalblog.com -

The AR Super Safety – Part 1, by St. Leibowitz

The following is an overview on the installation of a new gun part known as the Hoffman Tactical Super Safety. It is a do-it-yourself open-source forced reset mechanism characterized as an “active reset trigger system.” It makes your AR go fast. If you do not approve of guns going fast, then please don’t read this article. You can desist from clutching your pearls and return with alacrity to the closest available nursing home, the banned books section of Barnes and Noble, or the United Methodist Church. Your cat misses you. Everything discussed in this article is currently legal at the Federal level and in my current state of Arizona. Nothing discussed herein is legal advice. Consult ATF rulings, a lawyer in your state, and your state’s laws, since some states do ban this kind of device, and others. I am not your lawyer, your doctor, your priest, or your real dad. Nobody paid me to write this and I am not personally acquainted with any third party mentioned herein.

Practical Background, Overview, and How-To

First: What is an FRT? An FRT is a “Forced Reset Trigger.” It functions by using a firearm’s cycling action to push the trigger forward to force the trigger to reset. This greatly increases the rate of fire by making it quicker for you to pull the trigger, consecutively. It is not a machine gun, under the laws of this country, as written, and for now these are not being treated as machine guns AT THE FEDERAL LEVEL. Machine guns are defined mechanically, as we’re all mostly likely aware, as any “firearm which shoots, is designed to shoot, or can be readily restored to shoot, automatically more than one shot, without manual reloading, by a single function of the trigger.”

The verbiage of “single function of the trigger” means that a mechanical contrivance under which you hold down the trigger and a bunch of bullets are fired, would be illegal for most of us to own. However, counterintuitively, a device which is essentially a helpful little mechanical buddy that lives inside your gun and helps you quickly re-pull the trigger a bunch of times, really fast, is another type of device entirely. Again, a FRT is perfectly legal at the Federal level, regardless of actual achieved rates of fire. Thus, as of this writing, it appears that FRTs are legal, though I will add that from my understanding only one specific brand is named in official rulings as legal, and the creators of that design are aggressively suing any company that makes another even vaguely similar design, with the ATF’s support. This is even the case for the Hoffman Tactical Super Safety, which is completely mechanically divorced from anything remotely resembling this certain company’s (admittedly very good and reliable) design.

The Hoffman Tactical Super Safety Overview

The Hoffman Tactical Super Safety entirely differs from the Rare Breed trigger (RBT). It is an open-source, 3D-printable, CNC-machinable, and widely compatible Forced Reset Safety. It gives you three selectable positions in its most common form; Safe, Semi-auto, and “Super Safe”. The latter is the active trigger/forced reset mode. It is compatible with both mil-spec and Geisselle triggers. It takes the form of two base components, along with two standard AR-15 fire control group parts that are modified a little bit. The base Super Safety consists of a cam, a little round cylindrical piece that is going to be your push-button style external safety, and a lever, which slides into a dovetail inside the cam once inside your lower. While these are best made in some kind of durable tool steel (mine are D2 steel, but S7 and 4140 are also common) they can be made in other materials such as nylons with reduced long-term usefulness.

The photo at the top of this article shows some demonstration models I printed in regular old PLA plastic. They would shatter if actually installed. The lever is shown in white, and the cams are two different colors. The lever slides into the dovetail, and there are little ridged channels on the underside of the cam to provide your safety positions. In the middle sending, there is an angular shelf on the cam. This is what pushes against the trigger to force the reset when in the middle position. Once parts of requisite hardness are properly installed, you will have a durable and reliable forced reset mechanism, at the admittedly irksome cost of now having a push-button safety on your AR, much like those found on a Ruger 10/22 or a Remington 870. I’m still practicing with this and have gotten okay dry-fire times but it is definitely enough of a learning curve that those of you with lots of invested time and muscle memory on the AR-15 will most likely be drawn to the traditional style selector switch offered by Rare Breed or other manufacturers. So why did I pick the Super Safety? My basic bullet points follow:

This ends my overview of the Super Safety and why it was chosen. Next, we will move on to installation and function checking. This will cover the modifications to install a Super Safety on only a standard 5.56mm AR-15. The MP5 and AR9 models are very popular but do require extra parts as well as some other considerations. A successful 5.56 install will help you get used to what you’re dealing with as it is by far the most straightforward.

(To be concluded tomorrow, in Part 2.)