I have the good fortune of living near the fellow who is making the ACS take down bows. Same guy that makes the ABowyer broadheads. I shot a couple of the O.L. Adcock bows he is making. I am impressed. I shot the same arrow out of my 54 lb longbow and a 45# ACS. The ACS shot 14 fps faster than my bow. It felt very nice in the hand as well. I must point out that I have no interest in this business. I just stopped to buy broadheads and found out he was now a partner in the company. These bows are going to change how we define traditional equip.
Nah, I don't believe so.
QuoteOriginally posted by Longbowmark:
I have the good fortune of living near the fellow who is making the ACS take down bows. Same guy that makes the ABowyer broadheads. I shot a couple of the O.L. Adcock bows he is making. I am impressed. I shot the same arrow out of my 54 lb longbow and a 45# ACS. The ACS shot 14 fps faster than my bow. It felt very nice in the hand as well. I must point out that I have no interest in this business. I just stopped to buy broadheads and found out he was now a partner in the company. These bows are going to change how we define traditional equip.
Small world. I live in Muskegon. Yes, those are great bows, but I believe my definition of traditional equipment remains intact ;-)
Dan
The CX has gone a long ways in changing the performance expectations of traditional archers. As have the Black Swans, Borders, Centaurs, Hornes, etc. It is a great time for us traditional hunters. There is a plethora of excellent bowyers out there and everyone can find a bow that suits them.
Dan
Sounds like our definition is the sames. ;)
Does he offer stock bows to buy there? Did he mention anything about the wait time dropping now that production has started?
Thanks for the info!
Marc
The wait time will drop considerably. I was told it will be down to under a year. I am due up late 07' or early 08'. Shawn
What! You didn't come home with one?
I've got one and looking for one for my wife.
They are partners with O.L. but they are a different company, different website. A&H archery. O.L.'s limb design but O.L. is not involved in the making of the 3 piece bows. The one piece bows are still O.L.'s perview under O.L. Adcock custom bows. Least that is my understanding.
Danny
Nice bows yes, change trad archery no. Maybe for 3D and target shooting if they meet the rule requirements but not the definition of trad. For those that are equipment junkies maybe, but the DAS and the new Morrison will probably surpass the ACS. All a bow is; is a tool. The shooter is trad archery, not what he shoots.
Marc, I did ask Larry about wait time on bows. He said they are about one year out on orders. Some of that stems from filling existing orders since they formed A & H. At present they can make around 200 bow a year. I called the place a facroty but that is not an suitable discription. Really its a small barn. Truth is when I saw a picture of one in Trad. Bowhunter last week I thought they did,nt look all that good. The real thing looks better than a photo. I was pleased. I guess I used a poor choice of words in my original post. I dont think this bow will change traditonal bowhunting. I should have said that it redifines how we look at bow performance. My first impression was that the take down bow would work great for any back country hunt where the bow needs to be stowed in a pack.
I forgot to mention, I dont think he has stock bows but you can e mail him. I dont even know the e mail for A and H. If you go to Abowyer.com you can get ahold of Larry and ask. There is a chance that there is lower poundage set of limbs. But dont take that to the bank. Like I said I just stopped there to buy broadheads
Regards, Mark
ETA..........I got on list awhile back...no word yet... :( :rolleyes: :( wish I had one to shoot 3D archery tournaments this spring and summer!!!! :thumbsup:
How good are those broadheads? I heard something about Grizzley's should be fletched right wing (I think) because of the angle of the bevel on the broadhead. Otherwise the head works against the fletch. Did they say anything about that with these, since they are a single bevel? My arrows are all left wing. As far as the bows, pretty impressive performance. Did the bows all have that high wrist grip. From looking at the site that was the one thing I didn't like about them - that high wrist recurve type grip.
TJ I will answer your first question first. Regarding the high wrist grip, yes they are higher than the average longbow. They do fill the palm in a very comfortable way. Everyone wants a different grip. I think the design of the bow is bettered by the present grip design. You can contact larry and ask what his opinion is on that. The grips are shaped by CNC. About the broad heads, I have not hunted with them yet thats why I was there. I have friends that use them and like them better than anything else. About the R or L wing feather thing. I have heard this brought up before. In my experience shooting Grizzly heads for years with Left wing feathers. No issue. For what it is worth I have heard that Dr. Ashby is testing this head and has some conclusions on it. I would defer to him since he knows more practical info. than I do.
OL has always been on the forefront of performance with his bows, and I'm not talking speed here, I'm talking about taking a heavy arrow and shooting it out of a lighter weight bow at the SAME speed as the heavy arrow out of a heavier weight bow ie: same KE and momentum, less strain on the archer.Most people don't appreciate OL's thinking.
That kind of thinking is somewhat revolutionary for trad archery whereas most people only think in terms of sheer speed and have to use a lightweight arrow to do it. Many bowyers these days are recommending 9 GPP and the people who buy their bows are even shooting less weight than that, some down to 6 GPP. OL wants to shoot a 10-14 GPP arrow out of a 45# bow equal at the same speed a 60# would normally shoot that 10-14 GPP arrow. There IS a difference between speed for speeds sake and performance.
I can guarantee you more bowyers will sell 60 pound bows avertising shooting 9 GPP at 200 FPS than will bowyers who advertise 45# bows shooting 12 GPP at 185 FPS. It's a product of our environment.
That said I shoot homemade wood bows at 47# and 10-12 GPP at 145 FPS :banghead: still I can appreciate where OL is coming from.
Mickey - bingo! We've never felt that speed was anything more than a way to measure performance. Being able to do more with lighter weight is a good thing. Nothing wrong with performance as long as people recognize what it enables us to do. I've tried to give some real-life examples on the website that illustrate what you're describing.
John
I agree, I'm much more impressed to see a bow shoot a 10-14gr arrow at the same speed as a heavier bow than a light weight arrow at higher speed.
if you take two bows shooting 9gpp, the faster one there will be faster at 12 gpp. the only reason 9gpp is quoted so often is b/c amo standards. that said, you're right, it's all a different way of saying the same thing and i'm not sure why some don't get it or care to.
longbowmark, let's work on you bow set up a bit, no way you should be a calculated lb/lb 24 fps behind.
What that means in real world terms is that guys with a short draw length and who can't pull 60#'s can still get the same level of performance at the shorter draw length and poundage.I don't see how that can be a bad thing.
CB
Im not getting any younger...I want one of these bows...BAD... :bigsmyl: :D :thumbsup: :pray: :pray: :pray:
The ability to get more performance out of lighter draw weights is what interests me, especially since my shoulder injury (old hockey injury) is getting worse.
I just visited OL's sight, but it says they are still not taking orders. Am I visiting the wrong site or are they not taking orders yet?
Dan
If you go to O.L.'s site you will see two icons to click on O.L.'s and A&H's. O.L. is not taking orders. A&H will put you on a list.
Danny
Disregard my last question, as I found the link via John Havard's post. Sorry for being dense ;-)
Dan
My ACS arrived about two months ago and I would summarize it as an outstanding bow. It is quiet with no hand shock, attractive without being garish, and the build quality is top drawer. On top of that it pulls very smooth, points where I look-(sometimes I just look in the wrong place without knowing it!)
It is just a darned good bow. Mine is 49# and it uses the same arrows as any of my higher poundage bows and they get there just as fast, and with increased accuracy. So that all said, the bow makes me very happy with my choice.
Longbowmark ,, what store is this,, pm me if you don't want to post it.
QuoteOriginally posted by centaurshooter:
" if you take two bows shooting 9gpp, the faster one there will be faster at 12 gpp." Are you sure about that ? What about efficiency ??
Jason,
I would refer you to the ACS website that John Havard posted. The place I stopped was not a store. It is a small but organized shop where the bows are manufactured. Larry is a guy I got to know when I worked part time at a local archery shop in Grand Rapids that is now closed. He is very skilled at making things, in this case bow molds that turn out the same product every time. Just check for the ACS web site. Regarding the performance aspect,just prior to my going there to buy broadheads I saw a bow review in Trad. bowhunter mag. that sums it up!
If I remember correctly Dr. Ashby suggested to use left wing with ABowyer heads since the bevel is opposite the Grizzley and right wing on Grizzley heads. Dr. Ashby had some great things to say about this broadhead. His notes about the wing matching the bevel said he really noticed the improved performance when the wing matched the broadhead (right wing for Grizzley) was when the BH had to penetrate heavy bone.
Joe
Joe
Does anybody know if a fella ordered from O.L. way back when and wants a three piece where it's going to be built?
perhaps an exception exists, but of any of the bows i've tested which is over 30 and almost all the "fastest" as well as several D shaped and everything in between, i've yet to find one slower at 9gpp and quicker at 12gpp. i'm convinced that if that's the case you've encountered some spine issues and that's what i take into account, now have i shot one bow at 9gpp and it be quicker and when i randomly picked up some 12 gpp arrows and just shot them and the slower one was faster with APPARENT good spine, sure. but in the end if you maximize spine i doubt you'll ever see it. what makes a bow more efficient at 9gpp makes it more efficient at 12gpp. and at no time will you find what makes a bow more efficient at 9gpp is a hindrance at 12gpp. theres alot of myths out there.
"Does anybody know if a fella ordered from O.L. way back when and wants a three piece where it's going to be built?"
I originally placed my order with OL for a 3 pc. When the partnership was formed between OL and John (A&H) the 3 pc orders were transferred to John Havard and OL is continuing with the1 pc bows. This at least is the story as I hear it. AND an email arrived today saying that my second 3 PC is ready! That's excitin'!!
Bjorn,
PM sent