3Rivers Archery




The Trad Gang Digital Market














Contribute to Trad Gang and Access the Classifieds!

Become a Trad Gang Sponsor!

Traditional Archery for Bowhunters




RIGHT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS

LEFT HAND BOWS CLASSIFIEDS

TRAD GANG CLASSIFIEDS ACCESS


Main Menu

Bear TD, Is That OK ?

Started by kibok&ko, August 23, 2011, 03:29:00 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

kibok&ko

Hello Guys, i have a question about this old Bear TD

Look please at the position/ angle of the arrow on the shelf



Is that OK for this type of old bow or is it a twist limbs problem ?

Thank you / David
save a cow eat a vegetarian !

turkey522

Appears something is not right.You should be able tell if one or both limbs are twisted.With the bow strung,looking down the belly side from tip to tip is the string running down the center of the riser.

turkey522

Post more pics might help from different angles.

Blackstick

I'm thinking that the camera angle exaggerates the appearance just a little bit. I have a 1990 riser where the arrow shaft also runs off the corner, so to speak. Those risers are cut to center, so the diameter of the arrow shaft will offset it a bit. Mine shoots pretty sweet, how about yours?

kibok&ko

save a cow eat a vegetarian !

fivebears

Something is definitely not right.Like turkey522 said,you should be able to sight down the string,centering it on the belly side of the riser and tell quickly where the problem is.

2treks

It looks to me like the arrows Dia is big and that the bow may not be cut to center. The addition of the leather strike plate puts the arrow out farther FROM center and forces it to be on the angle noticed. If you can't see an obvious limb twist the bow is fine
C.A.Deshler
United States Navy.
1986-1990


"Our greatest fear should not be of failure but of succeeding at things in life that don't really matter."
~ Francis Chan

OBXarcher

I had an A riser that was the same way. I posted pics of it a long time ago. The riser broke shortly after.

Here is what mine looks like now.

 

William F. Adams

My B handle looks like almost that w/ my large diameter cedars.

Since then I've switched to narrower carbons and raised the brace height, slightly different angle, but still a bit of one.

Night Wing

Something is DEFINITELY wrong. I'm guessing a twisted limb or both limbs.
Blacktail TD Recurve: 66", 42# @ 30". Arrow: 32", 2212. PW: 75 Grains. AW: 421 Grains. GPP: 10.02
Blacktail TD Recurve: 66", 37# @ 30". Arrow: 32", 2212. PW: 75 Grains. AW: 421 Grains. GPP: 11.37

bianchijon

I have one exactly like that. I was told by a shop owner that it happened all of the time. The fixturing to put the end clamps on the riser was a little sloppy at Bear and if the operator didn't pay attention it would come out like this. It used to be you had two options. You could send it back to Bear and they would replace it, or you could try putting shims under one side of the limb base on both limbs to try and turn the limbs. The last one never worked for me and I don't want to return it. It shoots just fine but it looks wierd.

Cherokee Scout

Send it back! If they will replace it you will be much better off.
John

jcar315

I have / had quite a few of the Bear TD's and have never seen that issue.

Is limb twist a possibility as others have said? Does the bow stay strung when shooting?

I would be very leary until I got some answers.
Proud Dad to two awesome Kids and a very passionate pig hunter.

Right handed but left eye dominant.

Proud to be a Native TEXAN!!!!!

"TGMM  Family of the Bow"

Bowwild

Now I'm afraid to look at mine!  It would bug me a lot. I'm glad it shoots for you.

kibok&ko

OK ...  the bow shoot fine for me co's i'm not a very good shooter and i know it so i never go over 15 yards ... the limbs look not twisted ... if i try to send it back do you have an idea about who i've to contact fix it in the BEAR company ?
save a cow eat a vegetarian !

Night Wing

After reading Biancijon's message, I say send the bow back to Bear Archery.

Just call Bear's customer service department and then who ever you talk to at Bear, get their name, telephone number, extension number, email address, etc.
Blacktail TD Recurve: 66", 42# @ 30". Arrow: 32", 2212. PW: 75 Grains. AW: 421 Grains. GPP: 10.02
Blacktail TD Recurve: 66", 37# @ 30". Arrow: 32", 2212. PW: 75 Grains. AW: 421 Grains. GPP: 11.37

LimBender

That would bug me!  Moving the strike plate forward and using skinny arrows will help, but not that much. How old is it?
>>>---TGMM Family of the Bow--->

Shoot some Zippers and a Bear.

turkey522

Never own or seen a Bear takedown riser.Trying learn something here if I should ever acquire one in the future.One question looking at Kibok&Ko pic and at the pic OBXarcher posted why is the riser narrower at the shelf on one than the other.Maybe I am just imaging this,just looks awful thin on Kibok bow.

kibok&ko

the arrow on the pics it's 5/16 carbon express heritage arrow, not a big 23/64 cedar shaft !

Of course i'm not the original owner and i hope the Bear staff can do something, i just contact also Brandon stahl of Rose Oak archery i'think he have a very good experience of this type of bow !
save a cow eat a vegetarian !

JimB

It doesn't have twisted limbs.I got one of the first A riser bows when they were re-introduced.It is just not cut to center.My first riser had to be replaced for other reasons but the second one was cut the same way.You just need to tune it for that and use lighter spined arrows which can be a good thing.Since there is extra thickness there,it also makes it stronger.I don't know how they are cut now but that is how they were made then.I talked to Dale Karch of 3Rivers Archery about it,back then.that is who I bought from.Many long bows are cut like that.


Contact Us | Trad Gang.com © | User Agreement
Copyright 2003 thru 2025 ~ Trad Gang.com ©