Thank you for your insight. I appreciate all the information and I’ll keep it in mind when I look to replace my stringThis is a debated subject. You ask good questions. Everyone might have a philosophy, but I try to evaluate what wears out a string… Things like weather, humidity, type of shooting (indoor, target, hunting) and volume of shot all play a role. A place hot and dry is different than hot and wet. Or constantly hunting in rain. That’s totally different than indoor target season that is without dust, mud, ect. The materials also factor as well. I won’t get into what brand or material is better than others, but as an over exaggeration, a $20 string on eBay is less likely to hold up than the $150 premium string from a reputable manufacturer…some of this budget bows have some terrible strings that stretch and wear easily.
Perhaps this is a an overthinking approach, but I look at my strings and evaluate if
1) there is evidence of strech? so does it stay in time? is their peep rotation? is the draw length consistent? If I’m constantly fighting tune, timing, rotation it might be time to look at the strings, no matter when it was last changed.
2) is their fraying?
3)how dirty are they and what type of hunting have I done lately?
4) how much shooting have I done?
5)how is the bow stored when not being shot? Is it humid where I store it? Dust? Is it under max poundage? Some store the bow for extended periods with the limb bolts back out to decrease string tension
That was a long answer but I’m not one who is convinced to just “change it every x years” or change by xxx amount of shots. For me (hunting primarily, mostly dry weather) I have been able to go 2-3 years and be fine. But one bow I only get one year out of the strings, it frayed apart on me and nothing changed about my shooting environment. This is also over several manufacturers.