Sims Vibration Laboratory LimbSaver® S-Coil Stabilizers
- Unique continuous spiral NAVCOM® design
- Excellent vibration reduction
- Improves balance
- Reduces bow-jump
- Dampens hand shock
Rated 4.8 out of 5Â by 68
reviewers.
Rated 4 out of 5Â by BassMass3232 Nice Stablilizer
For the price it is well worth it to purchase. It helps balance the bow and I also noticed vibration reduced. Steadier the bow the better the groups and this helps.
March 26, 2013
Rated 5 out of 5Â by Arkansas15 Best 'Ive found
This is the best stabilizer I've ever used and the only one that will ever be installed on my bow. Haven't found a stabilizer that helps more than this one.
January 8, 2013
Rated 5 out of 5Â by PaDutchman great stabilizer
A great stabilizer for a reasonable price. Put it on my bow the day I got it and noticed a considerable reduction in recoil. Would recommend to anyone.
October 15, 2012
Rated 4 out of 5Â by JaredL Works
I picked this up because my other stabilizer was getting loose and started rattling. This one is made solid and doesn't seem to have any where where rattling will be a problem. Not a bad price for the quality and has seemed to reduce the vibration, but not much help with the noise. I just wish they had one about 2" longer as it seemed to throw off the balance a little being so short and light.
October 10, 2012
5 Questions | 14 Answers
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i have a old bear whitetail II compound bow which should i getAnswers
Top 250 Contributor
A:Â
Stabs are a personel choice --Right now i have a 8 inch x-celerotor on my bow.A:Â
I would go with the longer heavier one. But i think its mostly personal preference.Top 500 Contributor
A:Â
go to Bass Pro Shop and try each one in their shooting range. I personally was not impressed with the more expensive ones.A:Â
Any size will work fine with the bow, in fact, they will make a marked difference. 4.5" will be sufficient, 7" marginally better, but will have to be removed to put your bow in a case.I use 7" and love it, I don't mind having to take it off to case the bow. Some people find that's too inconvenient.
Answers
A:Â
Personal preference really. The length and weight determines balance. Therefore the shorter one could be better for one archer, and the longer one better for another. My thought would be if you are having a hard time holding still at full draw get the longer heavier one to try and even out the balance.A:Â
Shorter one will work just fine. Yes the longer one will help more with heavier bows with higher draw weights, but will have to be removed to case the bow. Your shot groups will barely have a noticable diffference between the two. Both will signifigantly decrease noise and vibration about equally.I use the 7" version as I do not mind removing it to case the bow. But the performance difference was minimal. I gave the 4.5" version to my wife and got myself a 7" version. Both work as advertised, with the 7" version my groups are TIGHT, with the 4.5" version I might have been 1/16th of an inch bigger in my groups. Negligable performance increase for an increase in inconvenience. If I had to do it again I'd have stayed with 4.5" I would still kill the deer equally as dead, and still hit the target in the bulls eye.
A:Â
it depends on the size of the bow you are shooting. I bought the shorter one because i am female and am shooting a men's youth bow, so the longer one would add to much weight to the front of my bow.A:Â
I prefer the longer one. depends on you and what you like and what you want to spend.Answers
A:Â
The type of bow is not really a factor as to which one to purchase. Its all about being able to balance your bow better and holding still at full draw. The product is great and will reduce vibration and noise regardless of what bow you use it on.A:Â
Shorter one will work just fine. Yes the longer one will help more with heavier bows with higher draw weights or heavy vibration, but will have to be removed to case the bow. Your shot groups will barely have a noticable diffference between the two. Both will signifigantly decrease noise and vibration.I use the 7" version as I do not mind removing it to case the bow. But the performance difference was minimal. I gave the 4.5" version to my wife and got myself a 7" version. Both work as advertised, with the 7" version my groups are TIGHT, with the 4.5" version I might have been 1/16th of an inch bigger in my groups. Negligable performance increase for an increase in inconvenience. If I had to do it again I'd have stayed with 4.5" I would still kill the deer equally as dead, and still hit the target in the bulls eye. But that extra 1/16th of an inch of confidence is staying on my bow since I already paid for it.
Top 1000 Contributor
A:Â
4 inch works just fine on almost any size bow1 of 1
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