What if they made the wings on the end of the stabilizer the actual weights, and you can change them individually right or left with different weights in order to mitigate having a side/back bar. That would be interesting to see if it has any positive effect.
Should think about skeletonizing those wings. Lighter and less wind drag. Cool product though. I would definitely use it when I’m hiking and rattling for white tail.
Left hand shooting make a difference? I know you're a left hand shooter, and I see that the lever is on what would be the arrow side of the bow. Can the quick release be turned around?
Does anyone else have movement in their quick disconnect knob that you can hang in your pocket? There’s a spring inside but it’s not tight at all and mine has so much play
Yeah they move so you can orientate it how you want, but once you get it there I put a little dab of super glue and push it tight, then it won’t move but you can’t still break it loose if you have to
@@InsideOutPrecision not hating, just the v shape in the front that doesn't touch most arms... yes it does the job but could be better.. a stabilizer is supposed to stabilize an dampen.. maybe make the v aluminum more ergonomic and add a rubber lining or a gel lining... just commenting that yes it's functional but no bow companies would sell it as is. No hating man. Love the product idea and tour channel! 👌👍👊
@@mayhem035 oh I know! It has a rubberized coating on the V and has rubber dampeners throughout the bar. Honestly feels just like any other bar on the market
I mean why even practice with one if you don’t hunt with one. Your point of impact will change if you sight in using one and then take it off. I’ve never once had an issue with my stabilizer getting in the way of anything when hunting and I hunt some of the brushiest country in the west.
@@InsideOutPrecision For me it is a matter of weight. At ethical hunting ranges I simply don’t need the stabilizer because my shots are close and childishly easy. Now…indoors, or on the 3D range where targets are involved, and I may have to compete with snipers like yourself…that’s a different story. But for hunting? Bah…if you want to lighten your bow up, dump the stabilizer…
This is awesome. My occasional hunts have me walking easy 5+ miles a day. I always had an issue with my left shoulder hurting after a hunt. I always thought it was my pack that made my shoulder hurt but everytime I checked the straps, they were always even, load straps were the same as well. Come to find out, it was me carrying my bow on my left arm majority of the time lol. I doubt I’ll ever buy this stabilizer but it’s pretty genius.
I've been thinking of making something similar for a couple years, but that would just screw onto the end of my stabilizer. I always carry my bow with the stabilizer against my forearm to take weight off. It just doesn't stay there that easy. This is the fix. Just not sure I'd justify the $240 CAD for it. Also, do you know what the weights are for each size? I can't seem to find that anywhere. Just curious.
It depends on the game. Majority of elk, mule and moose are stalking. But whitetail, there isn't any other way to hunt but either in a tree or running dogs. They are so aware and always on edge, you wouldn't ever kill a big whitetail stalking.