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What is fascor on a older Bear Bow

Started by kohannahfound1, August 11, 2009, 07:05:00 PM

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kohannahfound1

I'am thinking about buying a older Super Kodiak that has fascor Good thing or Not?

acadian archer

44# Chek mate Hunter II

"shoot what you like, like what you shoot"

fatman

you might try posting this over on the History/Collecting Forum...some guys over there with a lot of answers  :thumbsup:
"Better to have that thing and not need it, than to need it and not have it"
Woodrow F. Call

Commitment is like bacon & eggs; the chicken is involved, but the pig is committed....

Stone Knife

We have a Grizzly with that, pretty sure it's polymer impregnated wood, kind of like future wood. I think it's a good thing.
Proverbs 12:27
The lazy do not roast any game,
but the diligent feed on the riches of the hunt.


John 14:6

Todd Rothermel

I could be mistaken, but I thought Fascor had something to do with the wood laminates in the limb... Fast Core... Fascor.  Maybe a pre-runner of Actionwood????

Bill Carlsen

Bow laminations used to be made with solid strips of maple. When actionwood came onto the scene I believe Bear Archery called it Fascor.
The best things in life....aren't things!

vermonster13

Fascor is resin impregnated maple lams in the limbs.
TGMM Family of the Bow
For hunting to have a future, we must invest ourselves in future hunters.

d. ward

fascor actoin wood diamond wood there all about the same thing laminated strips that are epoxy impregnated.bd

TonyW

Hey, Fred's marketing genius got me to fork over a few more bucks to buy a Super Grizzly instead of a Grizzly when I bought my first "real" bow.

I got a red regimental stripe and Fascor to boot!

Still, the old Grizz and its Fascor is my sentimental favorite. That epoxy impregnation is the closest thing to petrified wood I've seen.

Grant Young

When Fascor was introduced in advertising it was illustrated as impregnated wood laminated across the width of the limb in very even narrow strips. How accurate that illustration was is tough to say but previous laminations had been "stacked" sheets. I own and shoot both Fascor and pre-fascor limbs and can't tell much difference; I might even prefer the conventional maple lams.Bowdoc's description of its makeup is dead-on. "Fascor" came around with the Victor buyout and the advertising verbiage in the promotions became a little more inventive. It's the same movement that gave us the "Super Grizzly" which is only different from the '68 in that it has a dyed, laminated riser and was again produced in 58" instead of 56". Feel and performance were unchanged. Not being critical here, but I've looked hard for measurable improvements and can't find them.   Grant

Grant Young

Tony- very good analogy of Futurewood. Like petrified wood, it ain't really wood anymore.

portugeejn

I have a 1971 Grizzly with maple limb laminations, and a ???? Super Grizzly made with Fascor (I am trying to nail down the date in another post if anyone had ideas-shameless plug-).  

They seem pretty much the same to me, other than the Fascor adds weight to the bow. Given the 5-6# difference in the two bows, one seems just as fast as the other.  My guess is that Fascor is tougher than just plain maple, maybe less likely to be damaged from rough handling, but it is mostly marketing.

RonP

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