For you lucky folks who have both, is there an obvious difference in which is quieter? I would expect so but I would like to hear it from the horses mouth. I had TD Zipper LB limbs that were quieter than my curve limbs on the same riser. Getting near to placing my order and in the words of the bad guy in Dirty Harrys opening scene "I Gots Ta Know!" Thanks a bunch, Izzy.
IMHO, the TD LB is quieter. Whenever you don't have to deal with the string hitting the limbs, it is going to be quieter.
I had to sell mine when I switched hands, but it was quieter than my recurves, with all things being equal.
I still cry at night over not buying that bow from you Ken. :rolleyes:
Izzy,
I have never shot the silvertip longbow, but I am the new owner of a silvertip curve. I've always wanted one, but never came across the right deal. Mine is 60", #75@28", and has camo fast flight limbs. I'm not sure what string came on this bow from the p. o. But I gotta say I was very disappointed in how loud it was. This is my first recurve in a while, and I just assumed it was just loud by comparison to my longbows. I switched to longbows strictly due to how quiet they were over recurves.
So after a few weeks getting to know this bow, I decided to twist up a 16 strand B50. I added some big ol fur silencers and it was quieter, but I was still dissatisfied. Again I just assumed it was just the nature of a recurve to be inherently louder. Plus, I mean, there isn't anything out there that can be quieted down by a big ol fat Dacron string, right?
So last night I got a wild idea to try a skinny D97. I did some research and found that 12 strands is sufficient at this weight. I twisted one up and padded the loops with B50 to 18 strands in the loops, and added some simple yarn silencers at 9" from the top loop and 10" from the bottom loop.
I was completely blown away at the difference. The silvertip that was on the chopping block to be sold is now a different bow. It is easily as quiet as my longbows now. I'm still doing some experimenting with strand count, silencer material and location as well as loop padding. But I know now that there is hope for this bow.
I hope your enjoying your new tip. Please post pics. I don't get on here as often anymore due to work schedule, but it's nice when I do.
Take care,
Casey
Silvertip recurves do indeed need to be quieted down right out of the box. But once you find the right formula, they are deadly quiet.
I was shocked at how loud they are with no silencers at all. But when you spend that kinda dough, you don't give up. Each one has had a little different need, but I found them all.
Izzy, never shot a ST takedown longbow, but owned a couple of 1 piece.
Like Kat said, definitely quieter out of the box.
But you will be able to quiet the curve down to your satisfaction.
Its part of the fun.
Cant wait to see this bow.....
I ain't ever owned a longbow made by Shafer,but with a good skinny string and a pair of wool silencers my recurve are church mouse quiet,I am amased how quiet they can be,maybe just my Zipper SXT is quiter.
I don't have my ST takedown anymore :knothead: , but both of my one piece Silvertips are extremely quiet! I have a stock string with bow hush on one, and a skinny string with wool silencers on the other! :thumbsup:
Message sent izzy :thumbsup:
Ive never shot a Tip TD LB. I have 4 recurves. They are all extremely quiet. But I use SBD strings on all my bows.
I"ve only owned Dave's recurves and one piece longbows, so I'm no help on the takedown longbow. But, if I were you, I'd ask Dave himself. I believe he now shoots a takedown longbow. Can't go wrong either way, but you already know that!
I haven't owned a Schafer three piece longbow, just a one and two piece longbows. I have both one and three piece recurves. The longbows are quieter. You can minimize the sound of the recurves with a correct brace height, padded string, silencers.... and what not. However, with a lot less effort, my longbow still make less noise.
of course it is
Ask your buddy Kevin how dare you ask anybody else
I have had both and I kept the LB. Much quieter IMO. I know you can get the recurves pretty quiet but just can't get to longbow quiet. The only RC I have close is the new Habu recurve limbs.
Ok, I guess I'm just different.
I have a Silvertip t.d. l.b. but I haven't shot a Silvertip recurve.
I love the longbow. It is very quiet and all I have on it at the moment are cat whiskers .
I've been wanting to try a set of hush puppies but just haven't ordered a set yet.
I wish I had a recurve to compare with........maybe someday
I agree with ZMonster on the skinny string quieting a curve down in short order! I haven't done it with a Silvertip, but my Widow curves are whole new animals with the SBD string on them... There are other "skinny" strings out there, but the SBD is what I've used... Easily as quiet as any high performance longbow I've ever shot... Maybe not straight limb Hill or selfbow quiet, but scary quiet. Helps the manners of the bow too... You know the "Skinny" (sorry for the pun...) on my current thinking/situation Izzy, and I'd be willing to bet the tip curve would come around noticeably with a skinny string too...
To your question directly, it's a simple yes, the Silvertip longbow is quieter then the Silvertip curve... And they are within a few fps of each other also...
I have a Paul Shafer Silvertip and have to say that this is by far the quietest recurve I have ever shot. We are talking church mouse, did I say I love this bow! I owned an ACS longbow once and up until my tip, that was the quietest, not anymore! :thumbsup:
I don't do longbows but I can say of all my recurves the Schafer is the one that sound at the shot doesn't cross my mind.
The only reason I haven't hunted with my Schafer yet is whenever I shoot it I have more trouble keeping my non-dominant eye at bay than with my TT Titan, Sasquatch, and some others. I send a flier to the right (I'm RH but shoot LH to match dominant eye).
I'm thinking it must be the grip but the grip on this bow is the absolute most comfortable of any I've held. I like that it is a bit flat in the palm and it is checkered. Maybe the checkering is the issue, it is the only bow I have at this time that has a checkered grip.
It really bugs me. I am bound and determined figure this bow out so I trust hunting with it.
I marvel at it and don't have any idea (except for metal ILF bows) why some are more quiet than others. My Sasquatch is also very quiet.
Roy:I marvel at it and don't have any idea (except for metal ILF bows) why some are more quiet than others. My Sasquatch is also very quiet.
Roy, I believe that limb balance and timing is the answer to this. Few people understand how critical it is to have both limbs timed so that they return and hit brace at exactly the same time . Also how critical it is to have them the same weight and dimension. Bowyers that build with micrometer in hand are much more likely to do this than bowyers that build in mass with production more in mind than perfection. Not that this makes every bow a perfect bow but it does show up in the overall picture.
For instance I had a bow with a slight buzz in the limb that I was testing the other day and worked all day long to get that buzz out. Tiller was perfect . Bow was timed, arrows hitting spot on but it had this buzz./ I finally discovered that the top limb was very slightly out of alignment. I mean so slightly that you could not see it with your eye. I could not even see it to a scribed center line but I could see that it was not centered perfectly on the bolt on the top limb. I moved the limb slightly over and voila. No more buzz. Gone. Now in all the time I have built bows I had never experienced something this small making such a huge difference . But ,, LIve and learn.
Anyway. I take that much time and I know Kirk and several others do and I believe it makes the difference.
God bless, Steve
God bless, Steve
Steve,
I just noticed you are from Medford, OR. Beautiful place! I've done two NASP trainings there a few years ago. Dan Seifert (Wapiti Archery) was my contact there.
I've bought a few arrows from Dan. He has the nicest fire killed Port Orford cedars in the world. Nice guy too.,I have all respect for firefighters,
God bless, Steve
I shot my Silvertip longbow in my indoor league last night and a number of the guys commented on how quiet it was. The bow is 55# @ 28 and I draw just a tad over 29. I shot my 2018 aluminums in the league so I didn't get any of my Surewoods mangled, but I think it is even quieter with the woodies.
I have few Silvertip recurves and I have no issues with noise, but the longbow is a whisper.
D.P.
Not to hijack this thread, but how does the handshock compare? I haven't shot a longbow that I've liked yet, but I haven't had the opportunity to try many. Thanks
There is no handshock that I can tell. I have had surgery on my bow arm elbow from the old baseball days and many longbows irritate it badly. It has the feel of a longbow during the draw and none of the thump on the shot.
D.P.
Never shot the 3pc but had a 1pc LB and still have several recurves. My understanding is the 1pc and 3pc LB's have a similar limb design.
The 1pc LB was very quiet and shock free. The recurve is also very quiet and shock free but had a different feel/sound than the LB. Not better or worse, just different. Obviously the mass weight of the recurve makes it a touch more stable, at least for me it does.
If the LB was a few inches longer I would've kept it for sure. Just a phenominal shooter. The bow would always get complimented (as does the curve), especially for it's silence
I have had both and still have a 3 pc LB. Both can be equally quiet, it just takes a bit more tuning with the recurve-any recurve for that matter.