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Weight Reductions

Started by Onions, January 14, 2011, 04:00:00 PM

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Sixby

I reduced the weight on one of my sons longbows from 80to 62 lb and it was actually faster at 62 than it was at 80. I take it that the weight removed overcame the poundage lost making a faster limb. It sure was a lot narrower when I got through with it. LOL

Fritz

I've had two different bows reduced. Had 5# shaved off of both. One was a Thunderstick T-Mag, the other my SAIII Widow. Both shoot great. Both cost around $100 each to have it reduced. Very glad I did it.
God is good, all the time!!!

kenn1320

I inquired about it, was told 5lbs or less was all that could be expected. I think 5lbs would make a big difference if your on the edge.
I'm not a "deer" hunter, I'm a bow hunter that occasionally shoots a deer.

Terry Lightle

My son just had BW do his a couple of weeks ago,THINK he said 100 bucks plus shipping.Shaved 4 pounds off his recurve
Compton Traditional Bowhunters Life Member

tippit

Do it yourself by taking glass off belly & back and/or wood off the side (either flat or trapezoid).  You need to watch the tiller, poundage, and straightness of string down the belly.  For just a couple pounds it' a piece of cake.  Pending the shape of the limbs you can take up to 15# off on some over built bows.  If the tiller stays the same it should shoot as well in the lower poundage.  

JMHO, then again I have a lot of bows that I can trash & make knife handles from them  :)   Doc
TGMM Family of the Bow
VP of Consumption MK,LLC

Burnsie

I had Jim Belcher reduce my Brackenbury Quest before he handed the Bow Hospital over to Whip. He took off 4-5# and all is good.  I think it was right around $100-125 with shipping.  Call Whip,  I hear he continues to do fine work as well.
"You can't get into a bar fight if you don't go to the bar" (Grandma was pretty wise)

cyred4d

This is something I would like to have done to one of my bows. Glad to hear everyone has had good experiences with it.

ronp

I recently purchased a longbow and the bowyer reduced the weight 5#.  Or 4#, I don't recall.  It was a bow that was in stock and maybe wasn't yet finished, so the weight reduction was included in the purchase price.  So it was a good deal for me.
Ron Purdy

TGMM Family of the Bow
MTB
NRA

ronp

Along the same lines, has anyone heard of increasing draw weight a little, by adding another lamination of glass or something similar?  Just curious.
Ron
Ron Purdy

TGMM Family of the Bow
MTB
NRA

Bill Turner

Just had Craig Eakins reduce poundage on a Howard Hill Wesley Special from 55@28 to 50@28. 5 pounds is the about the norm. The original bowyer or someone familier with your bow design would be my recommedation to do the work. As for performance, it has been my experience that a bow that has been reduced in weight performs better than it did before the reduction. Perhaps an increase in draw length is the reason for this. As for price, $125 to $175 plus shipping is the norm. Remember, liability is a factor, but the bow is not only reduced in weight, it also must be refinished. Is it worth the money? If there is a sentimental attachment to the bow, or if you bought it at a good price, perhaps second hand, it might be money well spent. Only you can decide.

tippit

ronp,
Check with PV here.  He's made several bows where he has two sets of knock grooves  By cutting lower knocks you are effectively shortening the bow thus increasing the draw weight...Doc
TGMM Family of the Bow
VP of Consumption MK,LLC

owlbait

I had Jim Belcher and Whip work on bows for me and the work was reasonbly priced and they did a fine job. A friend had Chuck from TwoTracks work a bow for him, again, reasonbly priced and great results. All done for $125 or less, per bow. I did have another bow reduced and refinished, over $200, VERY long wait time, poor customer sevice, and I was not happy with the results. Sometimes you don't get what you pay for. Whip and Chuck would be good choices, IMHO.
Advice from The Buck:"Only little girls shoot spikers!"

Tater John

"Mystic rhythms,Under northern lights or the African sun,Primitive things stir the hearts of everyone"

bowgy

I'm getting older too and have been thinking about reducing all of my bows.  Dan Toelke did one for me $100 including shipping it back to me.  I called Wes Wallace $75 and Great Plains $100.  they all said 3 to 5 lbs Dan took off 5 lbs and it shoots great.

Zbone

Something to keep in mind, reducing means sanding, grinding, etc., which means the limbs will need to be refinished.


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