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Arrow rest help
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<blockquote data-quote="spdrman" data-source="post: 520893" data-attributes="member: 34092"><p>Id also recomend staying away from the whisker biscuit, I personaly use the trophy taker smack down and really like how it works, its a limb drivin rest, how most drop aways work is buying tying a string to your cable which raises the rest and uses a spring to pull it out of the way from the arrow with a limb drivin its just the opposite, it uses a spring to left the rest and when you shoot the string attatched to the rest pulls it out of the way, its a super simple to set up, I purchased a new bow in february and it had issues so I just got my new one last week it only took 5 minutes to paper tune it both times, on the loaner bow my pro shop let me borrow they had a QAD and that was also a really impressive rest, I like how when you let down it still holds the arrow and it was just as easy to tune, alot of my friends use rip cords and they haven't had any problems with the new model but I see a few of the older ones get stuck up broke when they shot an arrow thru it without it dropping, kinda turned me off on those, I had a G5 on my old bow and loved it the only reason I chose the trophy taker over it on my new bow is I liked the limb drivin rest and the full capture on the smack down, all the rest you are thinkin about would be great rest and they are all just as easy to tune, another thing that is really nice about the trophy taker is it 100% steel construction, I've tried them all and I always seem to go back to the trophy taker.</p><p></p><p>I also like shooting longer hanes with a helical, I shoot 3" fusion vanes which you might want to check out, they are really durable and they don't get that wrinkle look after you shoot them awhile like standard 4" vanes do.</p><p></p><p>Also if in your to reading books and serious about bow tuning id bow a copy of "Technical Bowhunting" by Joe Bell, Joe is a tuning freak and this book helped me fine tune my bow, I still reference back to it quite often if I am having issues with anything</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="spdrman, post: 520893, member: 34092"] Id also recomend staying away from the whisker biscuit, I personaly use the trophy taker smack down and really like how it works, its a limb drivin rest, how most drop aways work is buying tying a string to your cable which raises the rest and uses a spring to pull it out of the way from the arrow with a limb drivin its just the opposite, it uses a spring to left the rest and when you shoot the string attatched to the rest pulls it out of the way, its a super simple to set up, I purchased a new bow in february and it had issues so I just got my new one last week it only took 5 minutes to paper tune it both times, on the loaner bow my pro shop let me borrow they had a QAD and that was also a really impressive rest, I like how when you let down it still holds the arrow and it was just as easy to tune, alot of my friends use rip cords and they haven't had any problems with the new model but I see a few of the older ones get stuck up broke when they shot an arrow thru it without it dropping, kinda turned me off on those, I had a G5 on my old bow and loved it the only reason I chose the trophy taker over it on my new bow is I liked the limb drivin rest and the full capture on the smack down, all the rest you are thinkin about would be great rest and they are all just as easy to tune, another thing that is really nice about the trophy taker is it 100% steel construction, I've tried them all and I always seem to go back to the trophy taker. I also like shooting longer hanes with a helical, I shoot 3" fusion vanes which you might want to check out, they are really durable and they don't get that wrinkle look after you shoot them awhile like standard 4" vanes do. Also if in your to reading books and serious about bow tuning id bow a copy of "Technical Bowhunting" by Joe Bell, Joe is a tuning freak and this book helped me fine tune my bow, I still reference back to it quite often if I am having issues with anything [/QUOTE]
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