Whats the first bow component to upgrade?

richl025

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Mar 6, 2023
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New bowhunter here. Wanted to ask advice on what is the first of the (basic, low-end) components should I upgrade to get the most bang for my buck?

I have an inexpensive Mission MXR, and right now I have the "package deal" release, sights and rest that came with the bow.

New bow is out of the question for financial reasons.

I can shoot the MXR OK - grouping about 4" at 40 yds...

Which upgrade would give me most bang for the buck?

QAD Hunter drop-away rest
"Little Goose" trigger release
or the Tru-Glow 5 pin sight

Thoughts?

TIA!
 
I'd probably upgrade rest first. Nothing wrong with a five pin sight. I hunted with a cheap one for parts of last season. And they still work great
 
The Internet wants u to believe u need some kinda expensive thumb release. Wen all u really need is to learn how to shoot wat u have
 
Not sure what rest you have, but If you have a whisker biscuit keep that and get a new sight. And by new sight, I would recommend a used one on here. 4-5pin slider (if you want to shoot further) preferably spot Hogg. Reason being is the whisker biscuit will still shoot consistent where a cheap sight will move on you and now unreliable. Buy a Rest after that though and good arrows, even before, or right after a rest
 
Depending on your eyes, the sight could be the first or the last thing to upgrade.


It can be a little complicated.

If you can shoot well, the biggest gain might come from straighter arrows with broadheads on them.
 
I am assuming the list are components you already have, and you are looking to upgrade those components to different ones. Assuming the QAD is not giving you any trouble, the, sight is the first upgrade IMO. I prefer limb driven rests over cable, and hamskea over QAD, but functionally the QAD works as intended and the MXR platform forgives some of its flaws anyway. Your unlikely to see immediate improvements
to accuracy, ease of use, or basic functions by upgrading the rest. Now if talking whisker to drop away that is a different conversation.

Most of the package tru glows I have seen or installed have no hash marks, are composite, difficult to move easily making fine adjustments a nightmare, and can be hit or miss on pin brightness and durability. You resolve all of that with a 150 dollar black gold rush. Add a 100 bucks and now you have 3rd axis on a mover and possibly micro gang adjustments.
 
New bowhunter here. Wanted to ask advice on what is the first of the (basic, low-end) components should I upgrade to get the most bang for my buck?

I have an inexpensive Mission MXR, and right now I have the "package deal" release, sights and rest that came with the bow.

New bow is out of the question for financial reasons.

I can shoot the MXR OK - grouping about 4" at 40 yds...

Which upgrade would give me most bang for the buck?

QAD Hunter drop-away rest
"Little Goose" trigger release
or the Tru-Glow 5 pin sight

Thoughts?

TIA!
What kind of bowhunting are you fixin to do?

There’s some truth to a few people talking about the shooter and not the bow.

However, as you get better and depending what you’re trying to do, you’ll learn something about what you’re doing, so I wouldn’t worry too much about your bow components.

To answer your question head on, the weak link will be the little whiskerbiscuit knock off that it comes with. They get a little worn after a while and get a little play in them which can affect tuning. Second would be a good release. Once it’s set up, you want to really focus on a consistent anchor point.

However, I would recommend getting or saving for the best arrows you can afford with the best shop that can prep them as accurate as possible. If you’re new, maybe talk with your proshop to build them out. That’s where most of your discrepancies are going to be.

Maybe after some time you’ll have more experience to figure if you want a single pin, vs a 5 pin, vs a 7 pin, vs a multi pin slider etc. That bow is a “new to archery” kind of bow. It’s definitely something you can grow out of in a few years.
 
Before I did anything. I’d get a good set of strings from gas, threadz, John’s customs, catfish, or JBK would make the most sense to me. Factory strings are hit or miss on flagship bows, they’re even more miss than hit on budget friendly bows.

Next I’d do a rest like others have said. I’d get a hamskea epsilon. They’re heavily discounted many places right now.

After that, sight. A good slider from axcel, spot hog, or Montana black gold.

Last, quiver. I think this is the most overlooked accessory in archery. A good quiver isn’t cheap, and a cheap quiver isn’t good. Cheap quivers are loud, don’t balance well, and don’t do the greatest job holding arrows, in my experience.


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Nibble away at it, one piece per quarter, if you wish. Good sights, rests and quivers aren't bananas. They won't go bad. Buy used if funds are an issue. Use quality is still good stuff.
 
That process is active and ongoing. The question is about the components
Good, it's the most important part. That and learning how to tune your bow.

A tuned bow with the cheapest components will outshoot a top of the line everything thats out of tune.

If you do have a biscuit, those wear down/get sloppy as stated, upgrade the rest.
 
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