Anyone use the Thunderhorn "Boa" quiver? Does it stay tight on the bow? What about noise? Thanks,BigJohn
Great quivers! I have used the Thunderhorn Small Fry Boa and Limb Bolt for years....no problems and the customer service is incredible.
I have the same quiver that Aggie has and have been extremely happy with it.
Also, check out John Dill's quivers at Anneewakee Archery.
I think I have the small one too. It has the rubber strap that wraps the limb. Zero noise and holds well. I keep thinking the rubber strap will break away some day from constant use but still looks like new. On my BW bow it does creep up the limb a little now and then so I am in the habit of checking it before every outing.
But it is so quick to remove/install and so simple. I don't know that it could be better.
I have the six arrow-awesome. Helps lessen both noise and vibration.
I have the mini boa with the rubber straps on my PLGA. It is the 4 arrow model. Works really well, fits really tight and no slipping.
John
I'll let you know I just ordered on today. Joe
Thunderhorn Boa's are my favorite quiver,to me they felt like the had a better balance on the bow then other quivers I tried.Mine holds tight.
I have the 6 arrow model,does act as a noise dampener, no problem ove 6 years, several bows, great buy. Sam.
I have the four arrow mini boa,its a great quiver, the straps stay tight on any longbow or recurve, it has no noise, it looks great with leather hood, and it adds just a little wieght which adds more stability when shooting. The only bad thing is its 70 bucks at three rivers but in my opinion worth the price.
I have a couple of the 4 arrow Mini-Boa, two point strap quivers ... Awesome, one of the highest quality quivers around.
Service, second to none.
In extreme, Minnesota Cold, the Straps do develop a little memory, and can slide slightly..
I have a modified one that works like a dream.
I replaced the bottom-bracket arrow holder with the arrow holder from a Delta quiver because it holds more arrows in a smaller area and does so more securely. The quiver has been in on some major kills and performs flawlessly.
I use it on two-piece Hill bows. I can quickly unstrap the quiver, pull the bow into two pieces and slip them into my Schuh pack, strap the quiver to the outside of the pack, and ride my trials motorcycle to the end of a rugged trail, then quick put the bow and quiver together and take off deep into to Idaho back country after deer, elk, and bear.
It's a great quiver.
I have both the strap on and limb bolt models. They are tight, quiet and very well made. A good choice in a bow quiver.
Ron b