Havnt seen it. I run a hamskea. Do magnets react with carbon?
Same - a Hybrid hunter pro microtune. Have Trophy Ridge Revolution on the backup.
Havnt seen it. I run a hamskea. Do magnets react with carbon?
I got an armex 175lb draw crossbow
Heck yeAh. I have the hybrid without the hunter deal. Sometimes wish I had the gaurd out hunting but hate worrying about fetching contact like I used to get on the trophy taker. Best dang rest on the market I've tried so far.
I'm particular as hell with my gear, tightspot quiver, axcel sights, black eagle carnivore arrows built out with 80 grains in the insert. German kinetic heads for elk ff360 vanes.
I found that saving money in this sport only hindered my comfort in the field
I'm with you on single pins. They are the cats ass. If I had more bows I would run em on everything but my elk bow. I build heavy arrows for elk though and don't want to screw with ranging and adjusting.
I had a black gold slider on my strother moxie. I have never had a more accurate set up
I shot traditional recurve for years when I was younger. There were not many choices back then. Wooden or fiberglass arrows and I remember the early broadheads that used the razor blades that came out of the old style dispenser.
In the late seventies up to about ten years ago I used several different compounds. Bear, Hoyt, PSE.
Now I shoot a Parker Tornado crossbow with scope. My old wounds prevent me from effectively shooting a compound or recurve. Fast and deadly accurate. Ive shot 5 deer with it this year and none have gone farther than fifty yards. They were dead within seconds. A couple were broadside shots and the others were quartering away shots. I like to get as close as I can before I take a shot. A couple of them were within 10 yards. The farthest I've shot a deer with the crossbow is 54 yards. I would say that is the extent of my comfort zone to take a shot. Double lung and heart shots take them out quickly and I always get a pass-through. Since shooting the crossbow ,I havent lost a deer with it yet.
Spaventa - you should spine test those shafts, they'll have a soft side whether they're carbon or alloy
I am however going to spine test them for fletching but I'm trying out FLO testing as used on Golf clubs.
I Nock tuned my arrows for a couple years. I order em from south shore archery now. He spine tests, and Fletches accordingly, all arrows within a half grain I think and sorted per stiffness
Manufacturers of shafts should find and mark the stiff side. Not on cheap arrows, but on their top of the range shafts, they should. People would get better results and stay with that shaft. Its an easy way to add value that buyers of premium shafts would be happy to pay.
Man...
That pic is busy...
It took me a minute to see exactly what was going on there. Hehe. At first I was like, WTF kinda bow is that? Then I saw it was 2 bows hanging on your guitar stand.
They look like fun!