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

Bows cut past 3/16" center

Started by DanielB89, October 31, 2016, 09:39:00 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

DanielB89

I am wondering who makes a bow that is a true 3/16" past center.  I have recently acquired a morrison ILF wood riser and it is cut far enough past center that the arrow is going straight through the center of the limbs.  I have found this to be the most forgiving bow i've ever shot.  I can shoot anything from a .500 to a .340 and get the same POI with broadheads and fieldtips.  If anyone has ever read any of my posts, most of them are about how much tuning sucks and this bow has made it a breeze.  

Wondering who else makes one like this?
"Blessed is the man who trusts in the LORD And whose trust is the LORD. Jeremiah 17:7

"There is a way which seems right to a man,
But its end is the way of death."  Proverbs 14:12

A.S.

Blacktail, Black Widow, and A&H all do.

I personally think they all should be cut 3/16" past center!

A.S.

Another note. I have personally seen other bows that were advertised to be cut 3/16" past center, but they absolutely were not.  Pretty disappointing when that is something that you look for in a bow, and the bowyer doesn't get it right.

DanielB89

QuoteOriginally posted by A.S.:
Another note. I have personally seen other bows that were advertised to be cut 3/16" past center, but they absolutely were not.  Pretty disappointing when that is something that you look for in a bow, and the bowyer doesn't get it right.
Allen,
I agree!  May sound picky, but after this experience, I want all my bows to have the arrow going straight through the center of the bow.  

I have NEVER been able to shoot a 500 spine from a bow over #50.  This bow is over #50 at my 29.5" draw and i'm shooting a .500 spine arrow with a 50 grain brass insert and a 175 grain tip.  Absolutely  blows my mind.
"Blessed is the man who trusts in the LORD And whose trust is the LORD. Jeremiah 17:7

"There is a way which seems right to a man,
But its end is the way of death."  Proverbs 14:12

redshedbowhunter

Here are a few things about me:

I enjoy Hunting, fishing, raising goats, biking and kayaking. Love living life with my wife and 4 kids out in the country.

Here are my bows and such:
~ Black Widow Bows 66" PLX Longbow 47.5@31"  161fps with 600gr arrow
~ St. Patrick Lake Longbows (SwiftStyk ~ 64" (50#@31" = 161fps 600gr arrow)
~ Hitman Traditional Stykbows #1 (Recurve) (63" 52lb @31") ~

bear bowman

This is going to sound like a dumb question but, how do you measure this?

donnyjack

Acadian Woods are cut to 3/16 past center.
DJ
Love Life, Bowhunt, Flyfish, and Play a Martin Guitar                        :thumbsup:

DanielB89

QuoteOriginally posted by bear bowman:
This is going to sound like a dumb question but, how do you measure this?
I measure mine with an arrow.  When I nock the arrow, I want it going absolutely perfectly through the middle of the bow, limbs, and string.  You can also roughly estimate this by lining your string up straight through the center of the limbs and then seeing where your sight window falls.
"Blessed is the man who trusts in the LORD And whose trust is the LORD. Jeremiah 17:7

"There is a way which seems right to a man,
But its end is the way of death."  Proverbs 14:12

olddogrib

Daniel,
I think that's pretty common for wood recurve risers, long bows maybe not so much as they can be narrower in the grip area.  I've seen ways to measure it, but as has already occurred to you it's not as easy as it sounds. They're not like CNC metal milled risers with perfectly flat/perpendicular surfaces to reference off of. Maybe someone will chime in.  The easiest way is to ask the bowyer...and hope he's right. I'm assuming you're shooting 5/16" diameter standard shafts.  If you go skinny your results will vary and you may have to build out the sideplate.
"Wakan Tanka
Wakan Tanka
Pilamaya
Wichoni heh"

DanielB89

QuoteOriginally posted by olddogrib:
Daniel,
I think that's pretty common for wood recurve risers, long bows maybe not so much as they can be narrower in the grip area.  I've seen ways to measure it, but as has already occurred to you it's not as easy as it sounds. They're not like CNC metal milled risers with perfectly flat/perpendicular surfaces to reference off of. Maybe someone will chime in.  The easiest way is to ask the bowyer...and hope he's right. I'm assuming you're shooting 5/16" diameter standard shafts.  If you go skinny your results will vary and you may have to build out the sideplate.
I am currently shooting some standard 5/16" carbons.  I am not saying this way is the "best", but in my findings it is by far the easiest bow to shoot i've ever shot.
"Blessed is the man who trusts in the LORD And whose trust is the LORD. Jeremiah 17:7

"There is a way which seems right to a man,
But its end is the way of death."  Proverbs 14:12

Longtoke

Seems like a good idea to me as you can always build your strikeplate out, if you didnt like it.

DanielB89

QuoteOriginally posted by Longtoke:
Seems like a good idea to me as you can always build your strikeplate out, if you didnt like it.
that's what i've liked the most.  the ability to adjust an arrows spine is crazy. I've actually thought about sending this riser back to bob to have him install one of those duma fitchy's that goes behind your strike plate that you can adjust easily to fit your arrows.  I think I saw one of those on Pauldeadringer's bigfootbows.
"Blessed is the man who trusts in the LORD And whose trust is the LORD. Jeremiah 17:7

"There is a way which seems right to a man,
But its end is the way of death."  Proverbs 14:12

Sixby

EAglewings are 3/16 past center but when you add the sideplate they are more like 1/8th., I highly doubt that many if any are 1/4 in past which would make 3/16 after the sideplate, Or at least close.
God bless, Steve

DanielB89

QuoteOriginally posted by Sixby:
EAglewings are 3/16 past center but when you add the sideplate they are more like 1/8th., I highly doubt that many if any are 1/4 in past which would make 3/16 after the sideplate, Or at least close.
God bless, Steve
I can't speak for that.  I can tell you that with the strike plate(a skinny one) the 5/16" arrow is dead nuts center on the bow.
"Blessed is the man who trusts in the LORD And whose trust is the LORD. Jeremiah 17:7

"There is a way which seems right to a man,
But its end is the way of death."  Proverbs 14:12

Sixby

Yes, a 5/16 would be right on or very close especially if the window is slightly over 3/16 which is possible, or the string could be slightly offside of center. Either way it works for ya and that is a good thing.

God bless, Steve

Big Ed

"Get kids involved in the outdoors"

Wheels2

Super Curves.....
Covert Hunter Hex9h
Morrison Max 6 ILF
Mountain Muffler strings to keep them quiet
Shoot as much weight as you can with accuracy

katman

Couple of good ones already mentioned. Metal risers are usually cut generously.

Glad center shot is working for you, I prefer the right side a shaft touching the string at tip when looking from behind, you need a little offset for fingers. Does make tuning easier.
shoot straight shoot often

Brianlocal3

JD Berry Taipan (original) 53@28 62"
Cascade mountain Brush Hawk 53@28 56"

cch

Border has risers cut 5/16" past center. Risers are reinforced with carbon.


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