A stabilizer also prevents the bow from twisting when a shot goes off. I just shot a tournament and couldn't shoot with my back bar because it was on my hunting bow. I shot to the right several times for strange reasons. Pin was center of the dot and the arrow would land 5-6 right. After talking to a pro archer, he explained that back bar helps prevent the natural torque created when a bow goes off.I keep going back and forth if I like a stabilizer or not. Some days I throw a stabilizer on and my group size instantly shrinks in half, and the next day I take it off and my group size doesn't change at all.
I prefer a light bow, so I never throw on more than 3-5 oz total of weight between the front and back bars. I haven't found much benefit to a rear bar other than preventing the bow from dumping forward after the shot, so I try to keep the weight on that bar minimal as well.
That makes a lot of sense. Up until now I had only heard it was there just to balance out the bow's / shooter's natural cantA stabilizer also prevents the bow from twisting when a shot goes off. I just shot a tournament and couldn't shoot with my back bar because it was on my hunting bow. I shot to the right several times for strange reasons. Pin was center of the dot and the arrow would land 5-6 right. After talking to a pro archer, he explained that back bar helps prevent the natural torque created when a bow goes off.
I'm probably butchering the explanation. But it helps.
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Stability is dependent on the shooter more so than the equipment. Master your equipment
Then how do traditional archers shoot well? You are narrow minded. I shoot both.That’s simply not true. There are platforms and stabilizer setups that are much more stable than others.
There’s a reason people whose livelihood depends on hitting x’s shoot 40” axle to axle low let off bows with multiple 30” bars and weigh 10 pounds.
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Then how do traditional archers shoot well? You are narrow minded. I shoot both.
They don’t shoot well in comparison to the local asa club champion.
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Alot of us don't want an ASA setup for hunting....thats what I'm getting at...flew right over your head like a 10x from a longbow from 40. Some of us still kill them deader TF from range if needed without all that.
If your right nut depends on you hitting a 10 at 50 yards. You picking your compound or your long bow?
Now this quiver debate has turned into a compound vs. Longbow. Technicologically advanced equipment vs. An an antiquated bow. Obviously the compound wins. You continue to miss the point. You a very good shot? Cause you keep missing.If your right nut depends on you hitting a 10 at 50 yards. You picking your compound or your long bow?
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Now this quiver debate has turned into a compound vs. Longbow. Technicologically advanced equipment vs. An an antiquated bow. Obviously the compound wins. You continue to miss the point. You a very good shot? Cause you keep missing.
That variability is exactly what a well tuned stabilizer setup helps to prevent.I keep going back and forth if I like a stabilizer or not. Some days I throw a stabilizer on and my group size instantly shrinks in half, and the next day I take it off and my group size doesn't change at all.
I keep going back and forth if I like a stabilizer or not. Some days I throw a stabilizer on and my group size instantly shrinks in half, and the next day I take it off and my group size doesn't change at all.
It's definitely a "me" issue, no argument there. I just haven't found the perfect setup yet that I like above all else.This is a “you” issue, stabilizer or not you should figure out why this happens. Which way do you miss? If you’re having left right misses you are torquing or untorqing the bow with inconsistent grip pressure or having face contact. High lows are usually follow through or even target panic issues.
A stabilizer masks our errors and hides imperfections in our form. I chose not to run one because if I add half a pound to my bow that equates to a lot of extra strain on my feet, hands and fingers packing it around. I average about 12-13K steps the month of Sept. that’s about 350K steps in month and so 175K extra pounds I’m packing that month.
With packing a bow that much I notice it being heavier when I have my stabilizer on. I shoot very well and very consistent without a stab, I shoot slightly better with one. I don’t see enough difference to warrant packing it since most of my shots are inside of 60 yards.
If you feel like you shoot much more consistent with a stab then it may make since to use one. Another thing to think about is all these long stabs and back bars are made to make your bow sit level and react less on flat ground, that can be counter productive when trying to shoot steep up and down or at weird angles.