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Harrison wrote:You don't have to be ripped to draw a compound bow.
Any hunter can tell you that.
(long bows are different)
Drem wrote:Harrison wrote:You don't have to be ripped to draw a compound bow.
Any hunter can tell you that.
(long bows are different)
Why are you even comparing these two things at all? A wimpy little bitch video game player is nothing to a bow hunter. I don't give a shit how hot you are at counterstrike, I'd bet $500 you can't pull back a 75lbs bow and hit a bullseye in 15 tries from 20 feet away
i don't know what you mean by "long bows are different" unless you meant to say "long bows are a lot easier to use and almost anyone can string and shoot a longbow"
comparing video games to a real sport, that's hilarious. when video gaming requires skills that you can't master within 2 to 3 days, maybe people will take it seriously
Harrison wrote:Drem wrote:Harrison wrote:You don't have to be ripped to draw a compound bow.
Any hunter can tell you that.
(long bows are different)
Why are you even comparing these two things at all? A wimpy little bitch video game player is nothing to a bow hunter. I don't give a shit how hot you are at counterstrike, I'd bet $500 you can't pull back a 75lbs bow and hit a bullseye in 15 tries from 20 feet away
i don't know what you mean by "long bows are different" unless you meant to say "long bows are a lot easier to use and almost anyone can string and shoot a longbow"
comparing video games to a real sport, that's hilarious. when video gaming requires skills that you can't master within 2 to 3 days, maybe people will take it seriously
Long bows don't have a point you can pull to and then hold it with your pinky. (cams allow this on a compound bow)
You have to be a monster to hold a long bow at full draw for any extended amount of time.
Skeletons of bowmen from England have fucked up bone structure from constant longbow use.
P.S. Download Natural Selection if you have Halflife 1
If you master ANY part of that game in 3 days, I will give you everything I own. If Voronwe still came here, I'd say ask him how intricate that game is for an FPS.
arlos wrote:Actually Drem, while it may seem odd to be defending Harrison, there's a REASON why the Compound bow was invented, and that's because with the cams on there it IS easier to draw than a longbow. Once you reach a certain point on the pull of a compound bow, the cams take over some of the load. That's why they're there.
Medieval Welsh Longbowmen regularly used Longbows with 100-150+ pounds of pull. Modern compound bows top out at around 70 pounds. Basically, longbowmen trained from the time they were about 5-6 years old, and it took them 20 years to build up their strength and skill to be top-flight archers.
-Arlos
Minrott wrote:I'm going to have to back that up, as a bow hunter myself. I've got a 75lb single cam compound, a 50lb recurve and a 70lb long bow. The long bow is by far the hardest to draw and hit with, especially shooting 'instinctive' with no sights.
I can regularly paint a 5" bullseye with the compound out to 40-45 yards. But without a load more practice that I just don't care to invest in the long bow, I have a lot of trouble keeping arrows on the target. The reason that you would draw and hold at full draw is that you can release when you have the sight picture you want. Holding a long bow at full draw, getting your sight picture and staying steady with all that force is tough to do. That's one reason you're generally never see anyone have sights on a long or recurve, because shooting instinctive or 'sighting down the arrow' is faster, and with practice nearly as accurate.
Longbows and recurves take more skill and more strength to master than compounds.
Common Bows
Olympic, or Recurve: The only type of bow allowed in Olympic competition, as yet. Its limbs curve away from the archer. This is the direct descendant of the bows of antiquity, differing only in the materials used and refinements. The force required to pull an Olympic bow increases directly with the distance pulled.
Compound: This bow uses cams and cables to make the holding weight less than half of the draw weight. These bows are favored by bowhunters because of their greater accuracy, flatter arrow trajectory and their ease of use.
Beginners are often referred to the Olympic bow to start with, because it is deemed more difficult to master. The force required to hold the bow while aiming is considerable, sometimes requiring an archer to "let down" the bow without firing in order to rest the back and arm muscles. Mastery of the Olympic bow results in better muscle tone and overall archery habits; once that is accomplished the Compound bow represents a leap forward in accuracy and force. Also, a Compound bow is built for a particular draw length, which may not be easily changed. Growing bodies will grow out of compound bows swiftly in the teen years.
Drem wrote:you guys take everything way too seriously. first off why would you sit with along bow at full draw? long bows are easier than compound bows. you obviously have no real life experience, so shut up about it.
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