16 October 2012, 21:52
Yeah but no but yeah but, we all agree on one thing in common, our practice targets have the strage hooded head of someone familiar to shoot at


Choosing between a compound, recurve or crossbow
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16 October 2012, 21:52
Yeah but no but yeah but, we all agree on one thing in common, our practice targets have the strage hooded head of someone familiar to shoot at
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17 October 2012, 06:57
TH
Am I right in assuming that say a 60lb Compound Bow still requires you to draw 60lb but that it is just the last part of the draw that the cams reduce the weight so you can hold longer etc ? For anyone not used to archery drawing even a 40lb Bow a few times gets bloody hard work after a very short while as i found out when i tried out a friends Bow. After a very short time accuracy really started to tail off, not that there was much accuracy to start with ![]() Defintely not a bit of kit that you can use a couple of times to check it works and then stash away until tshtf, constant practice is required I think. I would have more chance at killing Flopsie or Bambie with a soggy tomato than hitting it with an arrow after 5 minutes on my mates Bow ![]()
You have the right to hold any beliefs you want. You do not have the right to have those beliefs automatically respected
17 October 2012, 08:37
(This post was last modified: 17 October 2012, 08:44 by NorthernRaider.)
(16 October 2012, 23:00)Hrusai Wrote: way i see it NR your perfect bow your describing, is a slingshot Naa the perfect bow would be a Charter Arms .22lR carbine ![]() ![]() (17 October 2012, 06:57)IB1 Wrote: TH With a recurve4 of say 60 pound draw you have to pull and hold that 60 pounds til you shoot, and even after a few seconds that is hard work esp if your patroling not just aiming at a deer. With a compound of the same weight you still have to pull the 60 pounds initially but when you get to the full draw the pullys reduce the draw weight needed to hold the bow at full draw to lin some case as little as 6 pounds (10%) draw weight. Which means you can stay on target ot track a target for minutes rather than seconds, which is great if the deer keeps moving or you are sweeping through your home looking for an intruder. And as i pointed out before the Compound is always strung and ready to use, recurves have to be unstrung. Recurves had the beauty of simplicity and reliability we like but they are generally just two big. There are now recoil free parallel compounds coming out only 28 inches long and are still full power bows. Both types have a place in our kits but my EDC choice is a budget compound, TH goes equally rightly for a quality recurve cos that works well for him.
of the 2 rifles i'd go for the ruger 10-22 breakdown any day, that charcter arms ar-7 is known to be un ergonomic and prone to jamming
![]() ![]() bloody hell that compound is small :O
17 October 2012, 22:04
(This post was last modified: 17 October 2012, 22:05 by NorthernRaider.)
(17 October 2012, 20:30)Hrusai Wrote: bloody hell that compound is small :O Actually for a compound its HUGE, 39 inches long, most come with parallel limbs or semi parallel limbs now and are often under 30 inches long. The beauty of parallel limbs is their is almost no recoil or vibration as they opposiing limbs cancel each other out. I had an ancient AR7 decades ago when we lived in the US briefly, good little rucksack and ratting gun.
17 October 2012, 22:16
Woe to those who add house to house and join field to field, Until there is no more room, So that you have to live alone in the midst of the land!
Isaiah 5:8
How would you reccomend carrying arrows? Across the back or waist etc.
(18 October 2012, 09:13)Tibbs735 Wrote: How would you reccomend carrying arrows? Across the back or waist etc.I imagine it would be possible to reload a bow far faster than a crossbow anyway.
Woe to those who add house to house and join field to field, Until there is no more room, So that you have to live alone in the midst of the land!
Isaiah 5:8 |
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