chub here' who uses brush buttons/brush deflectors one the recurves to quiet them down or whats the best way to stop string slap on curves i also us puff balls on string
Huh.....I use brush buttons to stop brush from lodging in between the string and limb.
:bigsmyl:
I didn't like the brush buttons....didn't deflect like I thought they would...did a little, but not totally.
As far as string slap....that's the reason I developed BowHush.
www.bowhush.com (http://www.bowhush.com)
When I had brush buttons on my bow, I couldn't really notice a difference in noise with or without them. They didn't keep crap out of my limbs either.
With the heavy brush all over this area, I won't carry a recurve into the woods without them. They work if installed correctly.
Did not work well for quite or brush.
They worked for me but if you have them just touching your limb like they are supposed to they sure can make a pretty good wacking sound. I quit using them long ago.
They work for me........
In a long ago far away land brush buttons were mandatory if you wanted to be thought of as knowing what you were doing. They were especially important if you had one those short brush bows that were popular at the time. This of course was before things like compounds and later traditional archery come along.
Just like then they work ok but few people use them now. Try them for yourself and make up your own mind.
I used to use them. They seemed to work ok. But if not adjusted right as Bearbowman says they will make quite a racket. Gary
Asked the same question last year. Am now "brush button free". Try saying that 5 times fast!
THOUGHT I had them properly installed but still caught the brush and were noisy. Always seemed to be fooling with them as well.
QuoteOriginally posted by bearbowman:
They worked for me but if you have them just touching your limb like they are supposed to they sure can make a pretty good wacking sound. I quit using them long ago.
Same here! Jason
I always thought (dating back to the 60's) BBs were obligatory. Buy a bow and put silencers and BBs on the string. This second time around shooting recurves (I'm going to stop using the term traditional)I also bought some BBs and put them on some bows. Often they cracked and worked out of place against the curve.
I took them off the string and don't use them anymore. I even have an unopened pack or two laying around. I don't think I sacrifice any quiet factor but I do pick up a small weed or leaf from time to time.
Not a big deal for me because, frankly I'm as fanatic about being careful with my bow and arrows as I hunt as I am to protect my eyes. For instance, I would never lay my bow on the ground quiver-side down like I see in some pictures even though I shoot nearly very durable carbons. Whenever I see guys on TV throwing their bows with full quivers around as they get posed for the heroe shot, I figure they aren't paying for their equipment.
If you want to try some, pm me your address and I'll send you a pair (in good shape), I took off my recurve. They deflected brush fine, but slipped on my string and then made some noise. Like others, I was always messing with them. I like simple, so took them off...
They work for me, always have. I don't notice any noise and they work as they should at keeping brush from hanging up(if they are installed with the flat side in or away from the tip) :campfire:
Have used them since the 70's. The material that they have been made from has changed several times over the years. I much prefer the softer material over the very hard.
They are just junk on your string that you don't need. A bad idea in the sixties, and still a bad idea today.
Some years ago, I ordered some for the Kodiak Magnum and the old static tip Bear I was shooting then. They were not made of rubber, but of foam of some type. You had to wrap the string above and below them with some kind of thin cordage (I used strands of an old string) to hold them in place. They worked well to keep the brush out, and were much lighter in weight and quieter than the dark brown hard rubber ones from the 60's. I quit using them when I switched to a longbow----I just picked up another recurve, and have been looking to buy more, but can't find the source, and I can't remember the brand name.
Anyone remember them? Have you seen them advertised recently?
I could probably make them easily if I could find some cylindrical foam of the same consistency----I looked at backer rod, but it doesn't seem dense enough.
I gave up on them.
I have not had good luck with them. They also seem to make my bow louder.
A new item out to replace the brush buttons is called STIKTAMERS. They attach to the limb and act as a string slap eliminator and brush guard. I have used these with great results.
String noise cam e come from various factors. The string and any recurve is always going to slap due to the fact that the string rests on the limbs. Too low of brace height will cause excess noise. Start with a high brace height and lower until the bow noises increases, the bow will tell you. Different string material, the more the stretch the the less the noise. Arrows spine incorrectly or arrows that are too light, thus the energy in the bow is lost and noise is the result. Lastly, placement location and type of material of string silencers. Experiment with distance form recurves. My preference is rubber band material as I feel that it stretches and it adds the least amount of weight to the string that robs performance.