I dont find the performance setting to be very different in the draw until you get to the hump, and the let down. But as we all know that mfr ibo ratings are based off max DL and DW settings, so ive always looked at bows that are adjustable up to my maxes so i know im getting as much out of it as possible. Im hoping after next bow season, i can find an rx7 ultra within my budget. If not, i'll just stick with getting the bowtech ss34
I have never shot a Bowtech experience, but I have shot older "speed" bows and sometimes it is night and day how they feel and shoot, even though they hit similar speeds. Speed for compound bows seems to be capped around the 350fps area for 70#, so I think most or all manufacturers prefer to make the bows as quiet, stable, and forgiving as possible while still hitting higher speeds.
I think we your trying to determine the vibration of a bow the sight need to be off of it. There is a lot of vibration in that scope. My Inline is dead until I add my sight and you can physically see the sight vibrating if you hit the riser.
I would go with ss34 or a Reckoning Gen 2 36 before I went with the Core SR. I shoot a Reckoning 35 and it is a awesome hunting bow, especially for a old timer like me(67)
Seems pretty reasonable for a speed bow. Personally I still stuck on the Core SS and Athens Axxis. Both have similar tuning and I don’t mind losing speed for a better draw. I hope Athens gets more reviews. Being lefty I need others opinions lol
I completely disagree with you. I have a core sr with the ripcord limb driven rest made for the core sr. Mine is a tack driver. My stabilizer is a little heavy but I like it. The only bow i have liked better than my core sr if the elite remedy. I can hold at full draw on target for over 25 minutes easily. I've been splitting arrows at 75 yards with it. Like five arrow group I will shaft slap at least once every group. Shooting golfballs at 100 consistently. The core sr is far better than you are giving it credit for. Your sideway jump is cause you are torquing it. Pretty much every down side you name your form is causing or the wisker biscuit you are using is the cause. Try using the proper rest on it, and not sabotaging with your form. Just going to a fall away the speeds will go up 10fps. Accuracy will greatly increase with a fallaway also.
Bowtech makes a 6in bh bow and its speed bow. Matthews makes a short axle to axle 6 in bh bow, hoyt for that matter too but they arent speed bows?? Rating any modern flagship on vibration and it kicking off to the side is kind of silly. They are all so close. Features, shootability, and ease of proficiency are what the average buyer are going to consider when they buy a flagship bow
I don't get why it's being referred to as a speed bow. It's a 6in brace height bow almost exactly like mathews lift 29 and hoyts alpha 6in brace height bow that are somehow not speed bows? Doesn't have a speed cam, it's not short axle to axle. I don't get it
@@jordanpowell228 The overall speed dictates whether it's a speed bow or not and generally anything over 340fps is considered a speed bow. The Core SR reaching over 340fps with a longer ata and brace height just means it's more stable and forgiving than a shorter bow rated similar would be.
A bow shooting over 340fps is pretty fast, wondering what would be considered a speed bow for you? I have it's predecessor the SR350 and think both pretty easily qualify as speed bows, especially compared to everything else on the market.
@sheyanderson4371 I don't disagree that it's fast. But, it's not a pse omen, pse xpedite, hoyt twin turbo or z1s. I would consider those speed bow with their 5in brace heights and aggressive feel. I'll concede that the Sr or sr350 cab feel aggressive at the right draw length or on performance but on comfort for anyone under the top of the cam they are both fairly comfortable if not flat out smooth
@@jordanpowell228 I guess I am just not understanding why anything other than the speed rating would be the qualifications for a speed bow. The Z1S has almost the exact same specs, just faster. The Omnia is 32" ata with 6" brace height and offers multiple mods for draw preference. The Omen is 32" ata and 1/2" shorter brace also with multiple cams for draw. If you are talking traditional, pure speed bows, half you mentioned don't meet that criteria and the last "pure" speed bow was probably the Xpedition Smoke and I don't see brands doing that anymore. Most companies speed bows are probably at the bottom in terms of sales overall too.
I dont find the performance setting to be very different in the draw until you get to the hump, and the let down. But as we all know that mfr ibo ratings are based off max DL and DW settings, so ive always looked at bows that are adjustable up to my maxes so i know im getting as much out of it as possible. Im hoping after next bow season, i can find an rx7 ultra within my budget. If not, i'll just stick with getting the bowtech ss34
i’ve got a bowtech core sr i’ll sell
@@brooklinandcora2284 you got it listed anywhere for me to check it out?
Idk dude, my 2013 bowtech experience shoots a 477gr arrow at 294fps, smooth and quiet. Have yet to see any reason to buy a new fancy flagship.
I have never shot a Bowtech experience, but I have shot older "speed" bows and sometimes it is night and day how they feel and shoot, even though they hit similar speeds. Speed for compound bows seems to be capped around the 350fps area for 70#, so I think most or all manufacturers prefer to make the bows as quiet, stable, and forgiving as possible while still hitting higher speeds.
I think we your trying to determine the vibration of a bow the sight need to be off of it. There is a lot of vibration in that scope. My Inline is dead until I add my sight and you can physically see the sight vibrating if you hit the riser.
The vibration will probably go away if you put the orbital dampeners they come with on
I would go with ss34 or a Reckoning Gen 2 36 before I went with the Core SR. I shoot a Reckoning 35 and it is a awesome hunting bow, especially for a old timer like me(67)
Seems pretty reasonable for a speed bow. Personally I still stuck on the Core SS and Athens Axxis. Both have similar tuning and I don’t mind losing speed for a better draw. I hope Athens gets more reviews. Being lefty I need others opinions lol
I liked my first gen revolt, but wasn’t the fastest. Back walls are solid !
I completely disagree with you. I have a core sr with the ripcord limb driven rest made for the core sr. Mine is a tack driver. My stabilizer is a little heavy but I like it. The only bow i have liked better than my core sr if the elite remedy. I can hold at full draw on target for over 25 minutes easily. I've been splitting arrows at 75 yards with it. Like five arrow group I will shaft slap at least once every group. Shooting golfballs at 100 consistently. The core sr is far better than you are giving it credit for. Your sideway jump is cause you are torquing it. Pretty much every down side you name your form is causing or the wisker biscuit you are using is the cause. Try using the proper rest on it, and not sabotaging with your form. Just going to a fall away the speeds will go up 10fps. Accuracy will greatly increase with a fallaway also.
Bowtech makes a 6in bh bow and its speed bow. Matthews makes a short axle to axle 6 in bh bow, hoyt for that matter too but they arent speed bows?? Rating any modern flagship on vibration and it kicking off to the side is kind of silly. They are all so close. Features, shootability, and ease of proficiency are what the average buyer are going to consider when they buy a flagship bow
Never been the first on a video before, nice
Never been first or second. Im betting that it's not as good as a hoyt!
@@c7u3676and im betting it depends on the hoyt youre comparing it too and what aspect(s) youre talking about being "better"
I love the Core SR so much I traded my Elite Omnia in on the purchase of this awesome bow!
Lift more and it won’t be a problem. lol
Bowtech is just getting lazy in their designs
far from a speed bow for sure...
I don't get why it's being referred to as a speed bow. It's a 6in brace height bow almost exactly like mathews lift 29 and hoyts alpha 6in brace height bow that are somehow not speed bows? Doesn't have a speed cam, it's not short axle to axle. I don't get it
@@jordanpowell228 The overall speed dictates whether it's a speed bow or not and generally anything over 340fps is considered a speed bow. The Core SR reaching over 340fps with a longer ata and brace height just means it's more stable and forgiving than a shorter bow rated similar would be.
A bow shooting over 340fps is pretty fast, wondering what would be considered a speed bow for you? I have it's predecessor the SR350 and think both pretty easily qualify as speed bows, especially compared to everything else on the market.
@sheyanderson4371 I don't disagree that it's fast. But, it's not a pse omen, pse xpedite, hoyt twin turbo or z1s. I would consider those speed bow with their 5in brace heights and aggressive feel. I'll concede that the Sr or sr350 cab feel aggressive at the right draw length or on performance but on comfort for anyone under the top of the cam they are both fairly comfortable if not flat out smooth
@@jordanpowell228 I guess I am just not understanding why anything other than the speed rating would be the qualifications for a speed bow. The Z1S has almost the exact same specs, just faster. The Omnia is 32" ata with 6" brace height and offers multiple mods for draw preference. The Omen is 32" ata and 1/2" shorter brace also with multiple cams for draw.
If you are talking traditional, pure speed bows, half you mentioned don't meet that criteria and the last "pure" speed bow was probably the Xpedition Smoke and I don't see brands doing that anymore. Most companies speed bows are probably at the bottom in terms of sales overall too.