Free: Contests & Raffles.
cams make a huge difference in how it feels when you pull it back. if you have gnarly cams on one bow and a mathews solo cam bow the mathews is gonna draw back much smoother being a medium solo cam, compared to say a pse duel cam bow. i dont know much about the martin bows but i would say it has nothing to do with the limbs and everything to do with the cams.
i want to know if i hit bone its gonna drive through. there is always lucky shots and she was fortunate to not hit any ribs allowing the arrow to go clean through.
a 70 pound bow "hopefully" wont have any trouble breaking through 2 ribs. i would rather have 4 wheel drive and never use it then have 2 wheel and need 4 cuz im stuck. if you can pull it no prob then why not.
I used to practice at 80 lbs and hunt with it set at 80 lbs. That way everything was the same. I wouldn't be switching around the poundage right before the hunt just to "feel like a beast".
Quote from: Miles on July 27, 2011, 10:09:08 PMI used to practice at 80 lbs and hunt with it set at 80 lbs. That way everything was the same. I wouldn't be switching around the poundage right before the hunt just to "feel like a beast". You just rolled with 80# draw weight to feel like a full time beast year round? What kind of beast would you be if you cranked that thing up to 83# though?
Quote from: jackelope on July 27, 2011, 10:42:25 PMQuote from: Miles on July 27, 2011, 10:09:08 PMI used to practice at 80 lbs and hunt with it set at 80 lbs. That way everything was the same. I wouldn't be switching around the poundage right before the hunt just to "feel like a beast". You just rolled with 80# draw weight to feel like a full time beast year round? What kind of beast would you be if you cranked that thing up to 83# though? That's right...full on beastmode.