fulldraw71
FNG
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2024
- Messages
- 98
It came in! Planning on being at the shop bright and early. I’m providing my Hamskea drop away, and my Black Gold Rush sight from one of my old decommissioned bows and I’m taking a few of my arrows. The tech said he would get it roughly tuned and then have me shoot it to get it finished. He said I didn’t need to bring bare shafts just a couple fletched arrows. I’m new to this game of picking up a new bow at a pro shop as I’ve always bought mine online and set them up myself.
I opted for 55-65. I can shoot at 60-62 lbs all day long if I want or I can bump up to 65 (it will most likely max at 67-68) and shoot a little more if I feel the need. Anyhow I have some GT 340 hunters cut to 29” in 3 fletch that I’ve been shooting with my 61 lb Martin. After I ordered this Alpha X I bought a dozen Easton 6.5 match grade shafts in 300 spine cut to 29” and fletched them 4 fletch. Those arrows were bought/built specifically for my new bow. I couldn’t pass them up for $112/dozen which included cutting fees and tax. I’m wondering if I should take a couple of my 340s down? I mean if I decide to shoot this at 60 lbs all the time the 300 will be a little over spined. I know you can never be too stiff with a compound but those 340s sure tuned well and fly like darts out of my 60 lb Martin Onza.
If he tunes it to match my 300s and I decide to shoot 60 lbs and bump down to 340s, what’s the odds that I will have to tune all over again assuming the arrows are well within their spine parameters for what I have the bow set at?
Hoyt owners tell me if there is annything else I should pay attention to on the alpha x? I mean things to look for or ask questions about? I do my own work and own a bow press. For future string changes etc is the alpha x a bow that can lock up easily if the strings get out of spec? Coming from two 2012 Martins with Nitro cams, I am very familiar with binary cam systems.
I opted for 55-65. I can shoot at 60-62 lbs all day long if I want or I can bump up to 65 (it will most likely max at 67-68) and shoot a little more if I feel the need. Anyhow I have some GT 340 hunters cut to 29” in 3 fletch that I’ve been shooting with my 61 lb Martin. After I ordered this Alpha X I bought a dozen Easton 6.5 match grade shafts in 300 spine cut to 29” and fletched them 4 fletch. Those arrows were bought/built specifically for my new bow. I couldn’t pass them up for $112/dozen which included cutting fees and tax. I’m wondering if I should take a couple of my 340s down? I mean if I decide to shoot this at 60 lbs all the time the 300 will be a little over spined. I know you can never be too stiff with a compound but those 340s sure tuned well and fly like darts out of my 60 lb Martin Onza.
If he tunes it to match my 300s and I decide to shoot 60 lbs and bump down to 340s, what’s the odds that I will have to tune all over again assuming the arrows are well within their spine parameters for what I have the bow set at?
Hoyt owners tell me if there is annything else I should pay attention to on the alpha x? I mean things to look for or ask questions about? I do my own work and own a bow press. For future string changes etc is the alpha x a bow that can lock up easily if the strings get out of spec? Coming from two 2012 Martins with Nitro cams, I am very familiar with binary cam systems.