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#41
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Thanks for the info. What broadhead do you shoot? |
#42
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Have tried em all!!!!! Not into the tinkering stage anymore!
![]() If I still tinkered like I used too I'd shoot the delta snuffers, that's one bad dude! You would be lucky to get one to fly right out of 6, I would spend hours & hours tuning them till I got em right. |
#43
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Nope, didn't state that, nor did I insinuate that. That is just the way you chose to interpret what I said. What I said was just that, not up for interpretation. Ya'll have at it, I'll just watch from the sidelines from now on. |
#44
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I'm not sure how they felt that you were trying to be a tool. What you said was fact as fact can get. Darn Mathews fanboys just mad cause Hoyt passed them up!
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#45
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Ya'll go argue somewhere else
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#46
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Hoyt???? BAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!
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#47
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Just messin with ya Chad! Nowadays the competition is so stiff no one can afford to make an inferior bow, I shot Hoyt comp & 3d's only because that's who sponsored me, then It was a hard bow to keep tuned. I don't hear that about them anymore. Hoyt, Mathews, Bowtech are all good bows, just shoot what fits you!
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#48
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I bought a bowtech allegiance In 07 and have bought a few bows since then but I keep going back to that bow. It just fits me the best. Bows nowadays are all good just have to find the one that fits you.
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#49
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I have my eye on the Bowtech Invasion. Got one with my name on it at Chag's. I may have to have back surgery again which will mean two bow seasons in a row I will miss. It may come down to getting a crossbow cause I refuse to miss all of bow season. Bow season in MS is half the season and I'm itchin bbbbBbbbaaaaaaadddd.
To stay with the topic: Like women, I love all broadheads!!! |
#50
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Look man I aint lookin for no enemies on this site and and everyone is entitled to their own opinion and i respect that...but there are guys on here that will bash on ppl for no reason and try to make the guy askin the question look stupid..if i misinterpreted your post than my apologies....
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#51
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#52
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I have been busy the past few days, so I just read this topic. After reading several things that IMO were incorrect or misleading statements, I got to thinking maybe I need to go back and try to learn some more about how to set up a bow and how to tune a bow. I just spent ~ 2 hours watching vidoes and reading stuff on bow tuning. Again, IMO, there is some false and misleading stuff on the Internet. I have not been shooting a bow 30 years like Jude, only for 28 years....plus a few more, if you count my shooting as a kid. This statement was probably not true 20+ years ago....due to poor quality of some broadheads made back then. Today, IMO this is a true statement: Any fixed head will fly with your field tips if you learn to tune your bow. If your bow is set up correctly and you have the correct arrow for the bow .....the arrow will fly smooth and true to the target. Peroid.....end of statement. It does not matter if you have a field tip, fixed broadhead or mechanical attached to the arrow. If you do not agree.....fine, we will just disagree. I am a little confused about the second highlighted statement above....."broadhead tuning". If you adjust your rest or anyother part of the bow to make the broadhead arrow hit the bulls eye......then if you shoot a field tip arrow it will then hit at a different spot. If this is the case, does that not tell you there is something "WRONG" with the setup of the bow? If everything is setup properly, the only time a broadhead will fly a little different from a field tip is when there is a fairly strong wind blowing. When the wind is blowing a fixed broadhead arrow sometime gets blown or "floats" more that a field tip. This is because the fixed broadhead has more surface area to catch the wind. I have always used paper tunning to check how my bow is shooting the arrows. If the arrow cuts the paper with what is called a "bullet hole".....you are very close to perfect. But because you shoot a bullet hole at one distance it does not mean you are finished. You need to check the paper tune holes at several distances [say 3, 6 and 10 yards] because the arrow flight might not be stabalized at all distances. Walk back tuning is another way to check if your arrow is flying properly. But paper tuning will also show you if the arrow is flying off to the side. Both paper tuning and "walk back tuning" rely on the shooter to use proper shooting technique. I always shoot 2 or 3 arrows to check what the paper tears looks like before making any adjustment to the bow. But before doing any paper tunning shooting, there are things to check on the bow setup. Are the cam timing correct? Are the cams straight and working properly? Is the "Till" measurment the same for each bow limb? Also, need to check to see if your broadheads/incerts pass the spin test. So in closing......why settle for your bow shooting broadheads almost the same as field tips. |
#53
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