The bow tunes easily...I guess. I am by no means an archery PRO, thats why I buy at a local shop.
I had a problem so I told my Pro that my arrows were fishtailing. He watched a couple of shots, took my bow and put it in the press to relieve string tension, and twisted the cable loops that connect to the cam axle. He moved otop and bottom on one side about two turns and told me to go shoot it. It got worse so he put that side back and twisted the other side. It got better but not perfect, so he put another 1/2 turn in both loops. It was perfect and I was amazed. It actually looked like a process that I could handle.
The archery Pro said that the tuning method is recommended by Bowtech.
The tech was timing the cams. It's easy to do if you have a press. There are timing marks on the cams and you twist the cables to bring them in time.
Got one about 3 months ago and love it. 29" @ 65lbs is pushing 330 through my chrony which is way fast enough for me. Very forgiving imo. You would not go wrong in buying one but go shoot and see what you think.
What is a "hush kit"? I have never heard of this. The reason i ask is because my bow makes a "slap" noise when I pull the trigger. I shoot with a quiver ON my bow and I have a fall-a-way rest. I assume the noise is a combination of the two components. I can engage my rest to it's shooting position (bow not drawn and no arrow) and trip it to fall-a-way and the internals make a similar noise to what i mentiones above.
I didn't mean to hijack the thread.
Diamond/Bowtech makes a silencer kit that you can pick up at Gander or most archery shops. It comes with items similar to string leeches that go onto your string and cables along with 2 dampers that attach to your bow limbs. The only thing I hear when i touch my release off is the release then THWACK! Definitely quieted the bow down alot. I would try putting a piece of mole skin or cloth below your rest. I had to raise my fall away just a hair so that when the rest fell it didn't hit the bow. double check the screws on your quiver as well as that your stabilizer is screwed in fully. My buddy's bow gets that way after a while and it always seems to be one of those two problems. Locktite worked on the stabilizer.
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