AaronMColeman
WKR
Personally I like as few things as possible dangling off my bow, pack, body, everything when I'm in the woods. I've always been able to get the bow to balance pretty well with a tight spot quiver, so I've never really considered a quiver. So this is very much a question about a problem that doesn't really exist.
So why do you use a stabilizer on a hunting bow? My experience has been that modern bows balance really nicely without one and it's just added bulk and stuff to get caught on stuff when walking around. I'm open to playing around with a stabilizer, I just don't really see the need for one hunting.
The two answers I came up with are: 1) don't fix what isn't broken...but that's not gonna happen, we are on a hunting forum where the goal is to fix problems that dont' exist and 2) I'm not good enough with a bow to see a difference but better guys would see some benefit from a stabalizer.
So why do you use a stabilizer on a hunting bow? My experience has been that modern bows balance really nicely without one and it's just added bulk and stuff to get caught on stuff when walking around. I'm open to playing around with a stabilizer, I just don't really see the need for one hunting.
The two answers I came up with are: 1) don't fix what isn't broken...but that's not gonna happen, we are on a hunting forum where the goal is to fix problems that dont' exist and 2) I'm not good enough with a bow to see a difference but better guys would see some benefit from a stabalizer.