@@hooversoutdoors You got that right. I messed around with 3 different China bows with quality control issues and almost gave up on trad. I wanted a custom bow but good Lord, having to wait at least a year to get one was ridiculous. This thing shoots 630 grain arrows like they are bullets. I'm a happy camper now. Thank you again!
Great video. very informative. I have a set of long uukha gobi limbs on a 19" riser. It gives me 64" amo. extremely smooth which helps me "pull thru the shot" From 28-29" draw they gain 1.25#. Best $450 I have spent on any limb. ( rocky mt. specialty gear) great people to deal with. most other dealers are getting $500.
I had a shoulder injury I rehabbed over like 2 years. I went with a toelke SSLR and have loved it ever since. Never heard such a quiet bow or felt such a smooth shooting recurve. In bows that have static curve limbs or supercurve limbs (ukha almost falls in this latter category I think) the limbs are more efficiently designed. These kinds store more energy so a lower poundage limb can still smoke a higher poundage in speed and kinetic energy because of the velocity. They also draw super super smooth which is nice for people that have longer arms like myself who can't shoot a stacking bow as well.
I never could reach any satisfactory consistency with hoyt satori from .the shelf. But i did done it with a border tempest clone and uukha uureg limbs and a springy rest
I really like your content due to the breakdown of data. I have 2 new sets of limbs. 40 lb. Nika C1 & the 44 lb. Nika N3's. I already have a perfect bareshaft tune with the N3 limbs but they r 10 f.p.s. faster than the C1 limbs which r for practice & r more forgiving. If I could just find a 19" wood riser that meets all the criteria with tune-ability I'd be set.
Looking at the speeds at the 6:30 mark, the Hoyt limbs are the best performing speed wise. Oddly you didn't mention their draw feel compared to the uukhas and BW.
I had the same set up and arrows on 2 Satori bows and 2 Black Widow bows. I didn't chronograph them, but after shooting them I couldn't see any difference in performance and feel.
New subscriber. I like your content, concise descriptions on performance. I think the Satori will be my next bow. PS, have you or can you use longbow limbs on it? ScottinPa.
If you look at the change per inch on the limbs, the Black Widow has the worst stack for long draws. The Satori limbs were a consistent 2-2.3 pounds right out to 29. But the DAS and the Uuhka's experienced peak change/inch at 28" of draw and then experienced a reduced change/inch from 28 to 29" od draw length. Which is to say, those with draw lengths longer than 28" will experience something similar to "let-off" when shooting the DAS and the Uuhka limbs. The DAS limbs having a greater effect than the Uuhkas. (At least according to this specific data). This is also what I find to be true with my Uuhka limbs(the Let-off feeling) I've never shot DAS recurve limbs and cannot comment on how they feel.
@@CampfireKodiak uukha 41.7 lbs - 166 fps and 164 fps with 510 gr and 630 gr arrows. Das 41.7 lbs- 159 / 158. So moral of the story is you can get better performance from better limbs pulling the same weight. Up to each individual to decide if the cost is worth the extra speed and smoother draw feel.
@@hooversoutdoors I went by 5:56 OK then let's use 29" and heavy arrow. Same results. Hoyt 45.2lb 165fps BW 44.3lb 165fps Uukha 41.7lb 164fps Das 41.7lb 158fps
I’d like to hear a better comparison between the Hoyt and Uukha limbs. I hear the Uukha are far better but your results far as I can tell didn’t show that or did it??
Btw, what sizes of limbs was in this tests? If take in comparible measurements with 19" or 25" riser for example? Did all risers in test same length? And limbs? Longer limbs shoot little bit slower. Short limbs little bit faster. That's why I ask. To understand all included variables. Thx ☀️🍀✨
I learned a lot from this video. It makes me love my Hoyt Satori 66" with 45 lb. stock limbs even more now. It is truly a fantastic little bow.
Agreed, They're so easy to tune for great accuracy.
@@hooversoutdoors You got that right. I messed around with 3 different China bows with quality control issues and almost gave up on trad. I wanted a custom bow but good Lord, having to wait at least a year to get one was ridiculous. This thing shoots 630 grain arrows like they are bullets. I'm a happy camper now. Thank you again!
@@mrgroovestring Got a Satori almost 5 years ago, it's a keeper!
Great video. very informative. I have a set of long uukha gobi limbs on a 19" riser. It gives me 64" amo. extremely smooth which helps me "pull thru the shot" From 28-29" draw they gain 1.25#. Best $450 I have spent on any limb. ( rocky mt. specialty gear) great people to deal with. most other dealers are getting $500.
They're great limbs for sure, I really like rms gear also! Thanks for watching
I had a shoulder injury I rehabbed over like 2 years. I went with a toelke SSLR and have loved it ever since. Never heard such a quiet bow or felt such a smooth shooting recurve. In bows that have static curve limbs or supercurve limbs (ukha almost falls in this latter category I think) the limbs are more efficiently designed. These kinds store more energy so a lower poundage limb can still smoke a higher poundage in speed and kinetic energy because of the velocity. They also draw super super smooth which is nice for people that have longer arms like myself who can't shoot a stacking bow as well.
I never could reach any satisfactory consistency with hoyt satori from .the shelf. But i did done it with a border tempest clone and uukha uureg limbs and a springy rest
Man that Bow is silent!, I can not hear the bow BUT the impact of the arrow smacking target.. awesome!
I really like your content due to the breakdown of data. I have 2 new sets of limbs. 40 lb. Nika C1 & the 44 lb. Nika N3's. I already have a perfect bareshaft tune with the N3 limbs but they r 10 f.p.s. faster than the C1 limbs which r for practice & r more forgiving. If I could just find a 19" wood riser that meets all the criteria with tune-ability I'd be set.
Good info
Thank you sir!
Very interesting, thanks ! 🏹✔👍
Looking at the speeds at the 6:30 mark, the Hoyt limbs are the best performing speed wise.
Oddly you didn't mention their draw feel compared to the uukhas and BW.
Faster but they also have the most draw weight at 28" so they should be the fastest
My black widow is 50 pounds at 32 and it's draw. I have a CD and Uukha xs limbs at 46 lbs, they shoot the same speed
I had the same set up and arrows on 2 Satori bows and 2 Black Widow bows. I didn't chronograph them, but after shooting them I couldn't see any difference in performance and feel.
New subscriber. I like your content, concise descriptions on performance. I think the Satori will be my next bow. PS, have you or can you use longbow limbs on it? ScottinPa.
Longbow limbs will work fine. Any ilf compatible limbs will work. Thanks for watching
Are the tiller bolts bottomed out on the riser or are they a couple turns out?
I bottom mine out, seem quieter to me
If you look at the change per inch on the limbs, the Black Widow has the worst stack for long draws. The Satori limbs were a consistent 2-2.3 pounds right out to 29. But the DAS and the Uuhka's experienced peak change/inch at 28" of draw and then experienced a reduced change/inch from 28 to 29" od draw length. Which is to say, those with draw lengths longer than 28" will experience something similar to "let-off" when shooting the DAS and the Uuhka limbs. The DAS limbs having a greater effect than the Uuhkas. (At least according to this specific data).
This is also what I find to be true with my Uuhka limbs(the Let-off feeling) I've never shot DAS recurve limbs and cannot comment on how they feel.
How would let off occur? The 29" pull still has a higher pound draw weight than 28" even if it's technically less efficient past 28"
I had a widow PMAV that shot great but I sold it because My Habu Vyperkhan is physically lighter and a lot shoots much smoother.
Appreciate this in depth analysis. Was it the Das 3k limbs?
Bamboo core, no carbon
The ranking of velocity matched the ranking of dw perfectly. The moral of the story is more dw equals higher velocity.
@@CampfireKodiak uukha 41.7 lbs - 166 fps and 164 fps with 510 gr and 630 gr arrows. Das 41.7 lbs- 159 / 158. So moral of the story is you can get better performance from better limbs pulling the same weight. Up to each individual to decide if the cost is worth the extra speed and smoother draw feel.
@@hooversoutdoors I went by 5:56 OK then let's use 29" and heavy arrow. Same results.
Hoyt 45.2lb 165fps
BW 44.3lb 165fps
Uukha 41.7lb 164fps
Das 41.7lb 158fps
Yes Sir, nailed it.
What draw length you use in shooting through chronograph?
Thx ☀️🍀✨
29 inches
@@hooversoutdoors Thanks for answer ☀️🌿✨
How you like the uukha limbs? I was looking into getting a set.
They're awesome
@@hooversoutdoors thank you. Vary helpful video
I’d like to hear a better comparison between the Hoyt and Uukha limbs.
I hear the Uukha are far better but your results far as I can tell didn’t show that or did it??
Btw, what sizes of limbs was in this tests?
If take in comparible measurements with 19" or 25" riser for example?
Did all risers in test same length?
And limbs?
Longer limbs shoot little bit slower.
Short limbs little bit faster.
That's why I ask. To understand all included variables.
Thx ☀️🍀✨