I liked my Ripcord rest. Ground the prongs shorter.I mean. I have a 2009? Hoyt Vectrix XL. Probably 500 arrows or fewer through it; for a guy that used to shoot 50+ arrows a night, that's a little embarrassing.
I'd entertain selling it. I shot a PSE Nova heavily through high school, some 3D, some field, several deer, more split arrows than Dad wanted. Dad was rumored to be pretty damn good with a recurve from the 60's onward, and picked up compounds at about the earliest stage. He started shooting with me at age 5 in the backyard, and I dropped off shooting in...about 2009. (see the trend here?)
Shooting a bow at an expert level is, like many things, all about shooting a lot of arrows well.
I surely didn't get on here to sell a bow today, but the Hoyt's a helluva piece, and would only need a string, maybe a newer (faster) rest (mine is a RipCord), and some arrows.
Being that I do not arrow hunt deer anymore, and haven't picked it up in over 5 years, it's probably time to let it go.
Talk with the guys around here, and let me know if you want to chat about it.
My issue w drop aways is you gotta run a D loop and that changes anchorpoint.
Much prefer eliminator buttons and longer axle to axle rigs. Anchor is solid and no need to bend head. Its just right there....
Every time.
Alas, drop away is a thing now so my current bow has one, and D loop. Will kill my scores but for 30 yards and in whitetail.hunting itll be fine. FWIW the bigger peep doesnt help w bullseyes.
I got the Specialty Archery one to run a verifier when eyes get worse
I had the PSE Vector, and my buddy had the Nova. Think the Nova was supposed to be a little faster. Sold mine to another bud. Good fingers bows. He shot a 300 indoors fingers, dont think it w that bow, proly a roundhweeler.
No way i could ever do that fingers.
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