Jstumbaugh
WKR
What lighted nock is the best out there for .246 shafts? Tried some nocturnals for last fall but I wasn't comfortable with the accuracy. Couldn't match arrow flight of standard GT nocks.
Yep the firenocks are the best, expensive but worth it to me. Pretty sure they use gold on the chip boards but i may be wrong?
As a side note, the owner is cool and funny, ive talked to him on the phone. He must be danish or something lol
Damn im asian and i didn't catch it at all lol. His accent is gnarlyAsian.
Pretty cool guy, don't know that he's 100% right with everything, but he sure tries to figure it out and I can appreciate that.
Damn im asian and i didn't catch it at all lol. His accent is gnarly
Dorge is from China. Awesome guy. Very nice and will help you out anytime he can.Yep the firenocks are the best, expensive but worth it to me. Pretty sure they use gold on the chip boards but i may be wrong?
As a side note, the owner is cool and funny, ive talked to him on the phone. He must be danish or something lol
Yes ive called him a few times and he was very friendly and helpfulDorge is from China. Awesome guy. Very nice and will help you out anytime he can.
This is all true and good info to put out there. I shoot the valkyrie system so i dont need to tinker with weights or anything, its spendy but everything is very durable and seems to last me a long time. I do find the red lights help me find arrows even in the daylight in the woods, as long as the knock is exposed still lolFirenocks are well-engineered, easy to turn off/on, and offer a high quality nock fit.
A few things to keep in mind:
I go back and forth between regular nocks and lighted. Primarily, I elk hunt and as I mature as an elk hunter I tend to hunt animals in their bedding areas between 9:30 am -- 6:00pm so a lighted nock doesn't help me much and involves a lot of extra work to tune and set up. Plus, I like the GT FACT weight system a lot.
- With Firenocks, your nock fit will likely be tighter than most other nocks on the market. This will affect your tune. The solution is often to go down a size in center serving or drop a strand in your string when making it. Good local bow shops can reserve. Eventually, when you get a new string you will want to spec that string to fit the nock. This also means you'll want to practice with Firenocks. Their "practice nocks" are a clever solution, but I ended up just practicing with old real Firenocks.
- Firenocks require some involved user installation -- you've got to glue in a buffer piece in the back of your shaft and make sure it's depth is perfect and seating is tight. That takes time and some skill. Also, that buffer piece will block your arrow shaft so that you will no longer be able to use rear point weight systems like Gold Tip's FACT weights to fine tune an arrow.
- They are the heaviest lighted nock on the market I believe. Just something to think about.
If I were still hunting whitetails back in SC, then heck yeah I'd rig up some Firenocks and not look back.
Oh, they have replaceable batteries and all sorts of cool colors and flash settings to fit your situation.