A PRA and FN clear sire/dam will never have affected progeny. To get affected, a dog will needs to have one PRA/FN-gene from each parent and a clear dog has none to 'give'. He or she has two normal genes.
Not even a clear X affected combination will result in any puppies developing either of the diseases in question. Clear X affected = 100 % carriers and carriers will never develop neither PRA nor FN. However, carriers must always be bred to clear dogs to avoid getting affected puppies.
My bitch had a litter in May. She is PRA and FN clear, so I bred her to a untested dog who I like a lot because of his temperament (very merry, retrieves birds spontanouesly), health (+ 10 years and still excellent eyes, ears, movement etc) and pedigree. He has not been used much at stud (despite being a show champion and game tracking champion) and I wanted to take the chance to have a litter by him. I knew that I would never have any affected puppies. There was eight puppies - 4+4.
I was going to test several puppies, but I persuaded the owner of the male to test him to se if we could exclude at least one of the tests. I knew before breeding my bitch that there was a very small risk that he should be PRA-affected, since his eyes was checked only weeks before he got ten years old. He turned out to be a carrier for PRA and clear for FN. I still had two puppy dogs at home and had them tested for PRA, to see if the result could help me make up my mind of which of them to keep. One was clear and the other was a carrier. I kept the clear one and sold the other to a family who wanted a dog for agility, game tracking, field work, obedience etc. He will never develop PRA and can be bred to a PRA clear bitch (but he is not going to be a stud dog). I kept a puppy bitch in co-ownership and she will be tested before being bred - if she turns out to be a suitable broad bitch from all other respects. She cannot be 'worse' than carrier.
I also have plans to mate my other bitch, who is PRA and FN clear to a male that has been tested carrier. I realise that I will need to test the puppies and this time I think I will do the entire litter. But I don't see the problem using carriers or untested dogs/bitches to clear
dogs/bitches. These tests are excellent to avoid breeding affected puppies. But if we should use only clear dogs/bitches for breeding, we will soon have a lot of other problems because, then we have to exclude 50 % of the population.
The puppies will never develop PRA or FN as long as one of the parents is clear.