Trad Gang
Main Boards => The Bowyer's Bench => Topic started by: Treebeard62 on June 02, 2014, 08:37:00 AM
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Greetings Everyone,
I just received a one year old Bear Super Kodiak bow from a good dealer and it appears he overlooked a flaw in the curve near the lower tip. He offered to take it back but I wonder how hard it would be to fix. The fiberglass is separating from the wood over a 1 1/2" section of the belly side of the curve. When the bow is drawn, the gap widens to about 1/8". Clearly it needs to be fixed. Any suggestions?
Thanks, Denis
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Should be under warranty- I'd go that route...
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Do you think Bear will honor a warranty for a bow I bought used? Its number implies it was made in February of 2013. I'm considering returning it and stretching my bank account a couple hundred more dollars and buying a new Holm-made Goshawk longbow.It would have a stronger draw of about 50# instead of this Bear's 44# and would be 66"instead of 64". I'm still learning and have heard warning not to get too much draw. I'll call Bear and the shop to discuss.
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Yeah, probably don't want to shoot that, I'd return it or see if it's under bear's warranty (which it probably isn't, but would still be worth looking in to). Bear makes good bows, but I'd go with the holm if I had the choice. Either one will be a lifelong shooter if you take care of it (and it doesn't have any flaws haha). I'd say you're fine with a 50# bow, might take a week or so to strengthen the muscles, but definitely not an outrageous weight to pull so long as you've got healthy shoulders.
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If the dealer is good enough to take it back, then I would go that route.
Two of my favorite bows right there - the Bear SK, and anything that Chad makes.