This particular bow is very popular in Indonesia due to price and availability since it comes in many sizes and draw weights. It looks nice and works nice too.
You’ll have to get Sjef Van Den Berg to shoot it😂 He has a vid out there shooting the Core pulse similar to this bow, I saw that you had a comment on that vid. Being a poor pensioner the Core Pulse riser and Cartel limbs is what I use in my back garden range of 19 yards. Stick in there young man and keep your vids coming.
Thank you. My sons have all expressed interest and even a bit of talent in Archery, but with most things, who knows how long it will last. It's nice to know I can buy entry level like this and not be holding them back.
Hey @Nusensei, regarding this basically just being a Samick Sage, could you check if your limbs from your SS are interchangeable with this? If they are, then this is basically the new, "newbie friendly," recommendation I'll have for anyone just getting into the sport, and it means that you'll be able to pick up new SS limbs if people want to work their way up in weight.
How would you compare this to the SWA Spyder? One thing I like is that the Spyder does have higher draw weights for if you do decide to keep it as you progress in archery.
You are correct. It's not listed in the manual for my Sanlida longbow either, although on their website they do suggest 7-8" for that bow. For the Noble the brace height varies with bow length, from a low end of 5.5" for the 48" bow, to 9.5" for the 70" bow. Mine is a 68" and they recommend 8.5-9.25". I found it on one of Sanlida's site pages but it took a google search for the key words, "Sanlida Noble recurve bow brace height" to locate it as it wasn't on the normal product page that I could see. Must be buried somewhere else on their site, but it is listed.
See my earlier comment above.... Just noticed after posting that you specified yours as a 70". For the 70" they recommend a brace height of 8.75 - 9.5".
I like they offer various lengths for the riser , too bad the highest poundage available is a bit low. Now I am considering buying one and swap Sage limbs on it.
As it is marketed primarily as a beginner bow, I would assume they believe that not many new archers will be well served by a bow with a draw weight exceeding 42#. And then again, that may be what they feel comfortable that the riser can safely handle. From what I gather, the limb pockets are plastic, and I'm unsure of the strength of the inserts for the limb bolts. So I can't say that exceeding their max weight would be prudent. It may work fine up to 50ish pounds. Then again, it may simply explode... maybe on the first full draw, maybe on the 427th... Just sayin.... It may be for a very good reason that they only offer it in draw weights up to 42#... 🙅♀
@@NUSenseiSanlida archery (jandao/noble models) TD recurve limbs. They have wood overlays from the lower tip to the end tip. I'm not sure if wooden overlays are strong enough to handle low-stretch fastflight strings. Some reviews said those limbs were FF-compatible.
Yep. Good way to break bad bow arm form habits early on. Nothing like a sharp string slap to remind one how NOT to do it! 🤣 But yeah, overall a good beginner package, but maybe would have been better for the complete noob if they had included an arm guard. How many brand new wannabe archers will buy this bow thinking archery might be fun, then put it down for good after a few arm strikes that says, "shooting a bow might not be so fun after all... But, in an effort to keep price down that may have been the one thing that pushed it over their cost threshold.
Awesome video. Watching your genuine reaction to shooting the bow for the 1st time was great. It's testimony to how fun archery can be.
I really enjoyed this video of your raw while talking to your student! I was actually smiling and very attentive to everything
Really liked seeing your reactions to your first shots!
This particular bow is very popular in Indonesia due to price and availability since it comes in many sizes and draw weights. It looks nice and works nice too.
You’ll have to get Sjef Van Den Berg to shoot it😂 He has a vid out there shooting the Core pulse similar to this bow, I saw that you had a comment on that vid. Being a poor pensioner the Core Pulse riser and Cartel limbs is what I use in my back garden range of 19 yards. Stick in there young man and keep your vids coming.
Thank you. My sons have all expressed interest and even a bit of talent in Archery, but with most things, who knows how long it will last. It's nice to know I can buy entry level like this and not be holding them back.
Hey @Nusensei, regarding this basically just being a Samick Sage, could you check if your limbs from your SS are interchangeable with this? If they are, then this is basically the new, "newbie friendly," recommendation I'll have for anyone just getting into the sport, and it means that you'll be able to pick up new SS limbs if people want to work their way up in weight.
How would you compare this to the SWA Spyder? One thing I like is that the Spyder does have higher draw weights for if you do decide to keep it as you progress in archery.
Next vid: turn it into an Olympic bow 👍
limb pockets are plastic right ?
Where can you get the brace height information? It’s not written in the instructions booklet. I have this bow in 70” 30lb.
You are correct. It's not listed in the manual for my Sanlida longbow either, although on their website they do suggest 7-8" for that bow. For the Noble the brace height varies with bow length, from a low end of 5.5" for the 48" bow, to 9.5" for the 70" bow. Mine is a 68" and they recommend 8.5-9.25". I found it on one of Sanlida's site pages but it took a google search for the key words, "Sanlida Noble recurve bow brace height" to locate it as it wasn't on the normal product page that I could see. Must be buried somewhere else on their site, but it is listed.
See my earlier comment above.... Just noticed after posting that you specified yours as a 70". For the 70" they recommend a brace height of 8.75 - 9.5".
@@michaelc3416 Thank you very much
Are the limb pockets plastic or metal
Hard plastic
I use 125gn points on my 500 spine Victory, full length on my 32lb limbs.
I like they offer various lengths for the riser , too bad the highest poundage available is a bit low. Now I am considering buying one and swap Sage limbs on it.
To be fair, no beginner is shooting over 42#
@@popcorngenerator1925 Assuming a cheap bow has to be a beginner bow is ridiculous and consumeristic.
This is specifically marketed as a "standard beginner and intermediate" bow by Sanlida.
As it is marketed primarily as a beginner bow, I would assume they believe that not many new archers will be well served by a bow with a draw weight exceeding 42#. And then again, that may be what they feel comfortable that the riser can safely handle. From what I gather, the limb pockets are plastic, and I'm unsure of the strength of the inserts for the limb bolts. So I can't say that exceeding their max weight would be prudent. It may work fine up to 50ish pounds. Then again, it may simply explode... maybe on the first full draw, maybe on the 427th... Just sayin.... It may be for a very good reason that they only offer it in draw weights up to 42#... 🙅♀
It does look like a sage.
Where was it made?
It's Chinese.
Hey is the sanlida Noble FF compatible?
Yes. I believe the string it comes with is FF.
@@NUSenseiSanlida archery (jandao/noble models) TD recurve limbs. They have wood overlays from the lower tip to the end tip. I'm not sure if wooden overlays are strong enough to handle low-stretch fastflight strings. Some reviews said those limbs were FF-compatible.
Teaching the newbies right by omitting the arm guard 😂
Yep. Good way to break bad bow arm form habits early on. Nothing like a sharp string slap to remind one how NOT to do it! 🤣 But yeah, overall a good beginner package, but maybe would have been better for the complete noob if they had included an arm guard. How many brand new wannabe archers will buy this bow thinking archery might be fun, then put it down for good after a few arm strikes that says, "shooting a bow might not be so fun after all... But, in an effort to keep price down that may have been the one thing that pushed it over their cost threshold.
Something would have to go so wrong in production to mess up a Sage clone. Not surprised Sanlida has their own take on the model.
Nice review.
But at second look, not really.