I'm looking at a 15" ILF riser, and had a question about the poundage gain between longer and shorter limbs on a short riser.
Let's use this as an example: Let's say I mount up short 35# limbs, making a 56" bow on this riser and they end up scaling 45#@28". I then install medium 35# limbs, making a 58" on the same riser - would they also end up scaling 45#28", or would they scale more/less due to the different length?
If they are the same brand and model they should be about the same. Usually riser length is what changes the poundage. With most ILF risers there is also an adjustment of a few pounds. Just beware, different limbs feel different in their draw cycle and they are not always accurate for the poundage listed. Some makes traditionally run heavier than marked. Good luck!
Most of the ILF limbs (but not all now) list the draw weight on a 25" riser
shorts 35#
make a 66" bow on a 25" riser 35#, 23" riser 64" bow 37#, 21" riser 62" bow 39#, 19" riser 60" bow 41#.........
mediums 35#
make a 68" on a 25" riser 35#, 23" riser 66" bow 37#......
answer yes (maybe, but some ILF limbs are weighed at differnt limb bolt preloads (Max out, half way out or down tight max????? ya don't know for sure)
some of the ILF limbs now available are wieghed on shorter risers than 25". best to have chat with the riser bowery
rusty
If the limbs are of the same make they should be the same poundage.If you put the same limb on a longer riser say 17" you could expect a decreas of 2-3 lb in draw weight.Just the oposit on a shorter riser.
All depends on who made the riser.
Think of the limb bolts as draw length adjustment, rather than draw weight. Shorter draws can have then in tighter without getting stack, and longer draws back them out to avoid stacking and both can have the same weight at their draw, without having 4 pounds weight gain per inch.
2#/inch is a nice feeling. If you want more weight get heavier limbs.
The limb length's are also made with draw length in mind, to allow us to have an optimum draw at our draw length. Short limbs on a 17" riser drawn to 30" is asking for trouble with the bolts backed out, turned in it is realy asking for trouble.
Pete
I agree with Pete.Turning the bolts to get the right feel at your draw length is the best function of ilf risers.Unless you got a real short draw length a 15" riser is too short for anything but long limbs.Even with a 17" riser I don't want anything but long limbs and I draw less than 28". jmo
Thanks for all the info so far, guys. I'm looking at the new Tradtech Black Onyx (Recon) riser with some of the new Black Max wood/glass limbs. My draw hovers around 27" somewhere, but I'm still kinda leaning towards the medium limbs, which would give me a 58" bow. I've been shooting a 58" ACS for a while now and don't have probs with it, and I figure the medium limbs will be a tad faster at any given draw than the shorts. Thing is, I'm not an NBA player by any stretch of the imagination and bows above 60" start to give me some grief as far as mauverability goes.
Big AL:
I am shooting nearly the exact set up you described. I'm shooting a 15" Black Onyx riser w/ 50# medium Black Max carbon limbs, making a 58" bow that draws around 52# @ 28" with the limbs bottomed out. I was hoping to get 55# pounds out of this set up, but there is no way I can get that much weight out of these limbs.
That said, I'm glad it worked out the way it did. This set up shoots like a dream! I'm not a speed freak, but wanted to get all I could from this bow as I was considering it for an upcoming elk hunt. At this point I have no worries. Pulling 50# at my 27" draw, it is shooting a 540 grain carbon arrow 184 FPS.
I've pulled the limbs way beyond 27" and have yet to find any discernable stack.
Best of luck.
Ron
Pics of the Black Onyx please
I would like to hear more about the Black Onyx and Recon riser's. I may have to try one of them. How do they feel in the hand? How is the grip?
I just got the Onyx with 45# Medium Black Max limbs.The are rated on the 17" riser at 45 so I expect to see about 50 on the 15" riser.
I may be mistaken as I did not receive a manual, but the limb bolts should be no tighter than 2 turns out from the bottom and a max of 5 turns out like the Titan calls for.At 2 turns out from the bottom and a 27" draw they are very pleasant to shoot. It makes for a very nice shooting bow.
Pete
Onyx
(http://www.tradtecharchery.com/Sources/GetImage.axd?own=LA&imageid=326777)
Recon
(http://www.tradtecharchery.com/Sources/GetImage.axd?own=LA&imageid=326759)
Pete,
Thanks for the information about limb angle adjustment. I'm relatively knew to ILF bows and wasn't aware of the "2-turns rule of thumb."
I wanted maximum weight, so the way I adjusted mine was to turn the limb bolts until they just bottomed out and then I backed off 1/4 turn.
The bow shot perfectly right off the bat so I didn't even mess with other settings. I don't want to cause any damage, so tonight I'll try backing the bolts out 2 turns to see what happens.
Ron
anyone have a pic of that onyx riser strung up? I'd like to see it braced if possible
ttt
I am very interested in this riser also. If anyone has a full bow pic that would be nice to see. I have no ILF experience, say I want some 45# @ 28 limbs on this 15" riser. Then from what I have read some 25# on a 25 in riser would be close. Is that correct?
I think 35# would be right????? Isn't it about one pound per inch of riser length?
I'm relatively new at this ILF stuff too, so you ILF vetrans jump in and tell me if I'm wrong.
Prairie Drifter is correct. Limb weight tends to increase about 1 pound for each 1" decrease in riser length. The tricky part is that not all limbs are marked for a 25" riser. For example, most TradTech limbs are marked for the 17" Titan riser, so putting those limbs on a 15" Black Onyx would only increase the weight by 2 pounds over the marked weight. Making things even more confusing, some TradTech limbs are marked for the 19" Pinnacle riser.
I think the best advice is to make sure you know what length riser the limb weight was rated for and then add or substract roughly 1 pound for each 1" deviation in riser length.
Ron
Alright I thought it was 2 lbs per inch
I just got an e-mail from Lee Vivian today. They slapped some limbs on the Recon riser and it turns out, you're not gaining much poundage at all, if any. He said that the 45# limbs will scale 46-47# when they're cranked all the way down, but they do not reccomend cranking them all the way down because it is hard on the limb butts.
Ok,
Which bolts are we talking here? the bolts that the limbs slide into or the screw looking bolts that slide into the metal u shaped thingy on the riser?
Danny
But which limbs? On what riser where they originaly rated on? 25"? 23"? 17"? The trad tech limbs are rated on a 17" riser ,I think. If that's the case, then a 2lb gain is about right.
Okay,
I wanted to bring this ILF thread back up because I ordered a Black Onyx riser with the Tradtech wood/glass longbow limbs.
It is my first venture in the ILF stuff, so I will keep you guys posted on my progress.
Brett
Brett,
I'm with ya! I just ordered the Black Onyx riser and a set of medium 45# Black Max carbons from Lee. Should be here in a couple of days!