This channel is going to be geared towards providing quality tips and information regarding anything archery related! I will be uploading how-to tech videos along with a wide arrange of other things dealing with the sport of archery, and archery hunting. Thank you for visiting!
Hey David, great video! What angle would you recommend starting out with for your back bar, i.e. above, level or below the bottom cam and how far away from the bottom limbs?
That is not correct. May cause the lense to brake or get stuck. Look at the official hamskea site for the correct video. Don't just drop the lense into the housing. Put the lense ontop of the peep aparture and screw it in together upwards into the houseing to make sure it sits correct. Sorry for the comment. Dont want to be mean. I apprechiate you making videos for archers. Keep it up!
I'm a novice with about 3-4 hours of range experience and want to get a stabilizer, but need someone's input on what setup i should go for. I want to get good at shooting, but eventually would like to hunt, but not my primary focus right now. So should i get a 12"(10oz) front bar and no back bar Or 15"(10oz)front bar with 10" (6oz)back bar? Those are the options that I've found could be good for me. At 20 yrds my float isn't too bad, but anything past that is too much. I know muscle development is important, but i see so many experienced guys with stabilizers so i figure it is something that could be beneficial.
You assembled the Insight Peep different from how Hamskea show. The way you showed you are not able to alight the lettered lenses with the single notch in each peep whereby insuring that the lens is indexed each time it is removed and re-inserted. Were you able to serve in the Insight Peep as shown in Hamskea's website. This appears a little different the other typically tie-ins?
I'd go light. 400 GR. Speed isn't everything, but it helps with everything. I'd look to get it up to 275 FPS, and if go as light as necessary to get there.
this is one of the best descriptions of stabilizer lengths, weights and how it affects float and feel! subscribed. I would just add that for a shorter draw archer (like 26" or less) you might want to start with a 28" 10" combo. I am 26.5" draw and I found that with the general 30"/12" combo, the float just felt slow and lumbering to me. But I think for an average male (28" draw length) that the 30"/12" is an excellent starting point.
Hi this might be a dumb question but I'm new to archery. Is there a difference between front stabilizers and side bars? I have a 9" trophy ridge static stabilizer in the front. Could I just buy a side bar mount and put another static stabilizer on the side or do i have to get something that actually says "side bar" on the package?
Hey brother, you're an awesome Archer ! That being said when you do these videos keep a bottle of water ...the swallows were killing me LOL. No bullshit.
If you are from England, as an English citizen you are English. If you are from any of the countries in the British Isles you are British. This means that only the English, from England as a citizen can be both English and British. I was born in England but I consider myself as British. Calling myself English sounds weird to me.
Awesome David!! Q the length of your backbar, is that also not in correlation to your drawlenght? Shorter draw = shorter bar? (Only when backbar is pointed back, not sideways).
I see some companies advertise having the stiffest stabilizers and some go with having flexibility for dampening. Some have stiff rods and come with rubber dampeners (why have the stiffness then?) Stab's first and foremost role is to stabilize the aim so I was wondering how just how important is it for a stabilizer to have either of those features? Could you perhaps open up on the mechanical differences and how those affect the stabilizer's performance?
Great info! I'm looking to try some longer stabilizers on my next bow. Is it possible to use say a 12 inch back bar and then switch between a 10 inch and 30 inch front bar when going between hunting and 3D? I would need more weight on the 10 inch bar right?