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A good starting place for learning hinge is the Scott Advantage hinge release. It is one of their lower cost releases, and can be bought for $50 to 75 second hand. They last forever. It’s just a basic hinge, but benefits from a decade or two of Scott hinge design improvements. It’s also the little brother of the Longhorn Pro mentioned above, at about half the price. Its a great way to get started.Last summer I started shooting a Scott Longhorn Pro Brass hinge. It feels great to me and i still shoot it. I also have the hunting version of that hinge i use for all of my hunting. Honestly, look on archerytalk for a hinge at a reasonable price. Once you get the hang of the mechanics of it and decide you want to keep shooting it, then start looking for different variations.
I agree 100 percent about your assessment of the Scott Ascent. The adjustability of timing for both the click and time to fire make this release a great choice!I recommend the Scott Ascent.
It's one of the only hinges out there that allows you to adjust the click and sear independently. This is a huge feature for shooting a hinge as it's designed and especially helpful to someone starting out with one.
A guy named Shawn Padgett on ArcheryTalk has a great article on how to set one up: https://www.archerytalk.com/threads/scott-ascent-setup-article.5773959/. You can also PM him and subscribe to his private articles for like $10. Wealth of information.
Basically, you set how fast you want the click to happen (it should click as you relax and settle in to your anchor -- not sooner or later). Then, you set how fast you want the release to fire as you execute. Fine tuning a hinge release like this is AWESOME.
The click acts as both a safety and starting point for your shot process. There is no need for a safety on a hinge, and in fact I feel that a dedicated, mechanical safety actually sets you up for a hiccup in the best shot process for a hinge. This is something I realized after switching from the Carter Honey (with safety) to the Scott Ascent. You want to come to anchor, sit still, then relax and execute the shot. If you have a safety, you come to anchor -- do an awkward forward motion to disengage the safety and come out of your anchor -- go back to anchor, then execute. Wasted seconds and flow.
Releases like the Truball Fulkrum are also a good choice. While you can only adjust a single moon, you can adjust the finger pieces to control the feel of how the release fires.
Hinges are awesome. Super smooth way to shoot.