I'm glad to see you reviewing this . I have watched you shoot at this for a couple of years and I was wondering how it heldup to the others . Thanks again for all the different reviews . Keep up the great work .
Started out with the "layered" targets...after two, I went to the High Roller. It's standing up to what I throw at it. Thank you for the informative video. I stumbled into what you posted here. This should help out many! You and your team are awesome folks! Keep up the good work!
I love my high roller targets,2 on the smaller ones. Had no issues at all and they stay outside all yr long . I do live in SC so our weather is not the harshest but 1 is 5 yrs old and the other is 3 yrs old still holding up 👍 On a side note just want to thank Mr Ammons for you inspiration,as I have now been making my own strings ,Flemish twist, of course and now my 2 friends have 4 sets of strings that I’ve made for them and they totally love them. All because you really are a special kind of person who helps motivate me to keep learning and improve by adding new skills to the repertoire 😊😉🥰🎯🏹 God Bless you,your family and all the staff at Shatterproof Archery 🙏😇
Go to ,Big Jim’s bow company,and you can get a riser, $69.99 and a set of limbs 20-50 lbs for 69.99. Also there is Hitman Archery and he’s got bows for around $250.00. Any questions? They’ll be happy to help with arrow selection and buy a bale of hay as an archery target , around $10.00 for starters.👍😀 that should give you some idea 💡.
I have the small one and it has no problem stopping my crossbow bolts at 400fps...... but the first 50 bolts were special to get out...lol But I like it.......
Of course is more convenient to have a small block of rubber as target if you plan to go in the woods and shoot some arrows with your kids or friends or whatever. But for me the best option is going to the animal's fair, buying a block of hay, wrap it in lauggage foil or even the thin one for sandwiches but that doesn't last too long. And i use that for so long that it will literally start to grown gass in it at some point. After is done, i unwrap it, and throw in the garden as compost. Also if you want to keep a target for a long time you have to have very sharp tips on your arrows, if those are blunt it will shoot a little bit of material on the back with each arrow. You can also wax your arrows, with car wax from time to time if you use a foam target. But to me nothing beats the block of hay in durability. And if you wrap it in plastic foil really tight you can carry that around too, and when the wrap is punctured too bad just wrap some more foil. I've made such a target and i think shot thosands of arrows in it and i will probably break the bow before i need another one.
Really like the comparison between throwing the target and a disc. That helps a lot lol! My max drive is 50ish feet less so I definitely will not get this target as far