ce, That's a legitimate issue but one that can be dealt with pretty easily. First of all, we would not be selling any product while we are passing it around and can come up with a quick disclaimer that no warranties or assurances are made, that the bows are decades old, used by persons and in ways beyond our knowledge or control, that bows are by design under significant stresses and all bows are at risk for failure that they are offered for use as is, at the users risk, only,etc., and with recommendation that they be carefully inspected before stringing and again before drawing and again before shooting...which is what anybody who buys a 50 yo.o bow does, anyway. We can likewise put a similar disclaimer at auction time next year. Folks like Big Jim and RMSG sell used bows every day and hundreds of thousands are sold every year in private sales and some of those blow up the first time a buyer strings them up. I think we can work around that...Ive been a products liability lawyer for 35 years and never let that stop me from buying or selling a used bow.