Trad Gang
Main Boards => Trad History/Collecting => Topic started by: hotfootTG on April 16, 2008, 06:41:00 PM
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I have restored/refinished several Bear bows that were either marked as "Display" (sometimes but not always) or had characteristics of bows that were used as displays. Shown are 2. The characteristics were 3 holes drilled toward the back of the sight window. I have heard that these were used to provide a shelf for 3 arrows that were snapped onto the string. The bow with the 3 arrows nocked were then hung on the wall of the shop to display the model. Is this correct and why 3 arrows ?
Al
(http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/nn70/hotfoot_bucket/DisplayBows.jpg)
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Oh yeah the old display trick....Kinda weird too..Because about half of those were normal stock bows and the other half were shootable for the most part,but blemished.....my 66" 36# KSD was really only 64" it had the tips cut off (less recurve) at the factory for whatever reason and marked display with 3 holes.It scaled 44# as I recall.Swaped it off and the guy still shoots if sometimes...bowdoc
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So, are the holes from nails driven in for the prupose of resting 3 arrows on the bow for display ? But why three arrows ?
Al
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Yes field tip...razorhead and blunt advertising all three type of bear arrows..Aluminum wood and fiberglass..bowdoc
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All the dispaly bows I have seen had the small nails going through the arrows to hold them in place.The arrows were not resting on them.Probably used three arrows just 'cuz it looks better than 1 or 2 would be my guess.
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That looks cool. I'm gonna drill 3 holes in my 59 kodiaks.
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be better if you drove three really rusty little nails. They could double as sight pins.
All joking aside, sounds like it was a clever way to display arrows.
Trap
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Up for Mike
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TRAP,
Thanks !! Interesting.. Would be pretty neat to add to a collection.
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I have seen them where the holes had screw in eys in them. The three arrows were each in a separate eye about two or three inces apart. All were "nocked on the string" at the nocking point together on a strung bow. This created a fan effect for the display. Each arrow had a different point, Broadhead, field point, and blunt.
I do't know if the screw in eye version were done by Bear, or mayber some dealers did their own thing.
I'm sure there were variations on this.
I have a Kodiak Magnum Type I Dogleg the has a small hole drilled about one inceh below the upper and lower nocks. These holes were used to mount them to the wall as a diplay with wire or like zip ties. Mine once hung in the GREYLING museum.