![]() ![]() I just don't know if that includes the servings. ![]() Crossbow shooting blocks for 370 manual#Please forgive me in advance for what might be an incredibly stupid question, but like the bank robber said to "Dirty Harry" - ".I's gots to know" - when waxing the strings on my crossbow, should I also be waxing the servings as well? I'm brand new to crossbows, and the instruction manual of my Killer Instinct KI-350 says to lube the rail, and wax the bow string after every 5 shots. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and know how here. ![]() in all honesty I would recommend the center point sniper 370 as it has a fully adjustable AR style stock so it will fit his length of pull and you can pick one up at Academy for less than $300 and will by far out shoot the fisix with good arrows. As an example my scorpyd reverse draw bow would get about 100 shots before it needed reserving. ( draw length ) by putting the cams / strings out further than a traditional bow, by doing so you not only increase speed but you increase the string angle which is very hard on strings and serving. Stay away from the bear line as they where hit or more miss as to wether or not their flight track ( barrel ) was true or not, reverse limb where designed to get a longer powerstroke. Do you have any experience with this bow? If so would you recommend it or should I go another route? I've never owned a crossbow but I want to start my son with one and I like the reverse limb design. I was looking at the Bear Fisix and reading good reviews. Crossbow shooting blocks for 370 update#Heck you guys get the point if y'all need any help feel free to pm, I'm sure I'm missing a lot but will update this evening when I get in the stand They do require normal maintenance and since the string and serving are running across the rail it creates a lot of friction so this area of serving must be paid close attention to. They are louder than a verticle but some are getting it right and are getting close to that of a modern compound. Īt the end of the day they are all accurate and will all hunt, but like anything else are you happy with pie plate accuracy or arrow splitting accuracy out to all yardages. I now prefer the Excalibur brand vari zone scope with illuminated reticle or a Hawke xb30 which also allows you to dial your yardage aim points in to the exact yardage instead of having odd yardages like that in a factory multi crosshair style scope. The draw back to the Hha like their vertical bow sight is seeing the sight tapes in low light. Now let's talk scopes, most come as a package and are simply junk, the two I have found to be very repeatable and usable is a HHA dial with a vortex rim fire scope that will give you a 50 yard parallex. With factory arrows you will spend more from a local box store and get sub par accuracy, at the end of the day if your not shooting 1" groups out to your max hunting range then get some custom bees built. each manufacturer has their own weight, length, and nocks that they recommend, I have built and tried many but the most hard hitting accurate I have found are black eagle executioners that have been spine indexed and matched. Next let's talk arrows and since there is no tuning so to speak like a verticle where you can micro tune your nocking point, arrow rest etc arrows are the most important key to your accuracy. I believe a crossbow should have the following things,ġst a machined rail / trigger box which will be the most repeatable.Ģnd Some bows allow you to decock them without shooting after a hunt which is a great feature it saves on serving wear as well.ģrd is a feature only a few own that allow you to change strings without a bow pressĤth don't get caught up in speed or super narrow axle to axle length as these become a little more picky as to your arrows and can eat center serving. I also build my own arrows and spine index and match them as well.įirst start off with the bow, you don't always get what you pay for, some bows I have owned are upwards of $1500 ( bow only ) and others just a few hounded dollars. I have have owned almost every brand and multiple models by each manufacturer. I thought I would start a thread on crossbows since it seems many are getting into shooting and want to pass on what I have learned. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |