One more thought. What's your point on distance. Because you have a pin (arrow tip) for that already. Maybe mount the sight pin half of that distance? (i.e. 44 yard point on, 22 yard sight pin).
To answer your other question on zeroing distance, I'm not sure. It depends a bunch on your trajectories, anchor point etc. I would think something like 23 yards, and then you would hold top of the back for 30. ( these numbers are just examples not what I think the actual distances should be)...
Do what works for you! You will likely get some strong opinions from some trad guys about this not being "traditional". Don't listen to them, if it helps you be more proficient and enjoy the sport, then roll with it.
At one point in time I used a black sharpie on my riser to mark my 20 yard...
I agree with this, it is nice once in awhile to take the entire quiver off.
On the post above about your quiver moving and arrows falling out, I would say that it did not fit properly. My slide on selway is not going anywhere. I do buy the hybrid model for my ILF recurves and it is tight...
Another thing to consider is the easiest way to dry fire a bow is with nocks that do not fit properly. Sometimes an arrow can pop off the string while drawing but still be held by your fingers at full draw. Booooom!
Ask me how I know...
Re-serve the string with a slightly thicker serving material. Takes about 10 minutes and it's a good skill to know incase your serving breaks on a hunt.
This is definitely the most discrete.
Since you mentioned cost. My issue with the discreet packing has been that the only bag I own that I can fit my arrows in gets hit with an oversize charge.
Two options.
1. Buy a small, flat, skb style case, and lock it up. I pack my clothes around it to pad. The con with this approach is it will get flagged as a gun on the arrival location and may get taken to a secure location for you to pick up.
2. Pack it in a suitcase. Again use...
Also, just an FYI Drew and his wife just had a baby. So I'm not sure if they are taking some time off. But if he's not as reposnisove as normal that could be why.
Although I'm not a big fan for them, Alpine has a similar set up in there softlock quivers. It snaps into a bow mount, tree mount or hip mount. I have one and it works as designed, it just not deep enough for some of the longer 2 blade heads I shoot.
I have all 4 quiver types you listed. I prefer the Selway slide ons. They are solid and quiet and look good in my opinion. The gunshys are cool if you want to play around a bit with quiver angles and such.