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Hunting
Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Yote Equipment?
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<blockquote data-quote="DSheetz" data-source="post: 2973380" data-attributes="member: 91783"><p>All things will have failures, batteries die, fail in cold or hot weather. Closed reed calls freeze up get spit in them even in hot weather holding dust and corroding they need cleaned and washed in a mild detergent. Take a look at some of the failures with the M-16. No matter what e-call you buy it will have its good, and excellent points as well as some things that might not be to your liking or that you will never use. When you are first starting out calling think about a few things like what sounds will I really want to use will I need a caller that can store 200 sounds if I'm only going to use 10 or twelve of them. Will I get to the point that I really enjoy calling or will I decide that it's not for me. Will I be wanting to call mostly coyotes, or do I want to try for fox, or maybe cats. I had an e-call once that kept changing sounds, but it wasn't the caller it was the location I was calling in, there were high frequency signals being sent to a military installation jamming my calls signals. I have had to put my remote inside my jacket after I got my call up and running to keep the batteries warm. I have needed to use a good dry lube in the bolt on my rifle so that it didn't get sticky in extremely cold temperatures or hold a lot of fine dust in hot dry conditions. Everything that you buy to take with you on your calling adventures need to be maintained and treated in some way so as to lessen the chance of failures, so those things are things that you will want to consider when you are going to make your purchases. Take your time keep reading about all the different features, figuring out what you want and need for your situation by doing your own research, my needs and the needs of all others are different then your needs and the situation you will experience. I might be telling you about my high-priced purchase just to justify it to myself, or I might truly think it was a well justified expenditure of my hard-earned money.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DSheetz, post: 2973380, member: 91783"] All things will have failures, batteries die, fail in cold or hot weather. Closed reed calls freeze up get spit in them even in hot weather holding dust and corroding they need cleaned and washed in a mild detergent. Take a look at some of the failures with the M-16. No matter what e-call you buy it will have its good, and excellent points as well as some things that might not be to your liking or that you will never use. When you are first starting out calling think about a few things like what sounds will I really want to use will I need a caller that can store 200 sounds if I'm only going to use 10 or twelve of them. Will I get to the point that I really enjoy calling or will I decide that it's not for me. Will I be wanting to call mostly coyotes, or do I want to try for fox, or maybe cats. I had an e-call once that kept changing sounds, but it wasn't the caller it was the location I was calling in, there were high frequency signals being sent to a military installation jamming my calls signals. I have had to put my remote inside my jacket after I got my call up and running to keep the batteries warm. I have needed to use a good dry lube in the bolt on my rifle so that it didn't get sticky in extremely cold temperatures or hold a lot of fine dust in hot dry conditions. Everything that you buy to take with you on your calling adventures need to be maintained and treated in some way so as to lessen the chance of failures, so those things are things that you will want to consider when you are going to make your purchases. Take your time keep reading about all the different features, figuring out what you want and need for your situation by doing your own research, my needs and the needs of all others are different then your needs and the situation you will experience. I might be telling you about my high-priced purchase just to justify it to myself, or I might truly think it was a well justified expenditure of my hard-earned money. [/QUOTE]
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Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Yote Equipment?
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