Let’s say you’re a heads up, pro tree racer.  At the flash of the yellow, most racers will lift their thumb off of a button by pulling their arm straight back or up.  In that particular motion, you will use somewhere between 20 to 25 muscles to release the transbrake.  There are a lot of variables when using this technique.  Fatigue, the position of your 5-layer driving suit, the position of your thumb on the button, pressure applied to the button, along with the inadequacies of the commonly used button’s internals.  All of this adds up to inconsistency.

Quickdraw uses a fraction of those muscles and joints.  But more importantly, it eliminates a bunch of those other variables.  Have you ever shot a rifle?  Notice how crisp and consistent those triggers are.  Quickdraw has the exact same effect as a high-end custom rifle trigger.  With the latest prototype test results, both in car and on a practice tree, it’s undoubtedly quicker and more consistent than a standard button.  Quickdraw also works very well with top bulb racers.  The added consistency is a must at these big money bracket races.

So, why is it advantageous to own a Quickdraw?  Our internal workings of the trigger all but eliminate the inconsistencies of the switch itself.  Most buttons use a light spring to push back the button top and release the contacts.  Friction differences from surface contaminants and button cap cocking are eliminated.  Quickdraw uses internal springs that are much stronger than a button switch plunger to actuate the industrial controls switch in the heart of Quickdraw.  It does not rely on internals in the switch to actuate.  Levers inside of Quickdraw are precision machined like a custom rifle trigger to consistently break and operate the switch.