I bought one of these bows (longbow limbs) because I had heard so much good feedback on them and wanted to see for myself...and the price was very hard to beat. After a fair amount of experimentation my impressions are:
- It is of good design;
- It is fairly well-made (esp. for the price);
- Its very 'recurve-like' in feel, and quite fast for the weight (marked at 45#, scales at 49#);
- It requires a high brace (8-8.25") for best performance, and;
- Its probably the loudest bow I've ever shot (and that's alotta bows, lol).
The stock string was awful...may as well have come with nylon clothesline. The rest was wierd and cheap, reminded me of the stuff that falls off dollar store Halloween costumes. But even with a good D97 string, a decent rest and LOTS of tuning effort this bow simply lives to be loud...and requires mega steps to get it quiet. As in 'stick a rag between it's teeth and duct tape it's mouth shut' kind of steps.
But now it's finally very quiet, with two baseball-sized yarnball silencers, yarn string braids over both string loops and camo cloth bow sleeves secured firmly over each limb with multiple rubber rings. Yup, I gagged it up to the hilt. BUT, shoot a 630 grain wood arrow (love those wood arrows) out of it and the only noise is a feeble little 'thup'. And despite all the trussing up at 20 yards or less it's very accurate. I guess it learned it's lesson. I call it 'Gagged and Bound'. I don't think it likes that name, but what the heck.
So yup, brace height is a factor.