Hey guys, I had a wonderful surprise yesterday as the Toelke Chinook arrived for a test drive. It is a 50# @ 28 and absolutely gorgeous even with black fiberglass.
This bow immediately taught me a few things.
1. I think my old current longbow has been left strung for a long time. I realized the other day that all of the hill style bows that I have saw are straight when unstrung. Mine follows the string by about 4". It is listed on it as 52#@28 but I cant imagine now because if this toelke is 50, I think my longbow feels like 40#. My scale just came in the mail, so I'll scale it tonight. That really surprised me.
2. I tend to swing draw. I never really noticed it much, and I dont do it when working on form (a lot), but when I'm just shooting it just happens. This Chinook is crazy. It feels like it doesn't change poundage at all. It feels like you are pulling 50 from brace and dead steady all the way through. It makes it doable, but pretty awkward to swing draw. I cant say a bad thing about this bow, but I am wondering if a longbow is what I was truly looking for all along?
3.There are 3 bows I am currently considering. All a bit different in style. So it might be decided by shooting style.
a. Dwyer Endeavor r/d longbow
b. Javaman Helms Deep static recurve
c. Toelke Chinook dynamic recurve
I have shot a short r/d longbow and liked it. And I like some string tension at brace (my current bow had hardly any at all) but not so much as the chinook. That feels like your starting at 45#.
I am wondering how the Helms Deep fits in as a short static recurve. I think I have heard that they feel like a longbow. I doubt I'll get the chance to shoot one, so could you guys try to help me figure this out?
4. It sounds like maybe I have two very polarized examples with my right now. My old worn out longbow with almost nothing at brace, vs. the Chinook that feels like its full weight. Do guys usually just have a preference or is it easy to get used to one or the other? Is there a great benefit to one to justify changing what you are used to?
5. Just from what I know at the moment, I like the Javaman the best. And I am usually totally the 'pick what you want and wait and save for it' kind of guy. But I have to ask, since I am not currently sitting on a very decent bow, would it be wise to order something that I wont see for a year? Or should I factor time into my decision and get shooting (and improving) that much faster?