bacon6
Senior Member
Anyone have 1 looking at getting 1 any feedback would be appreciated thanks
Almost zero?
I asked a bow tech dealer just the other day about the reign lineup while getting a new string out on my bow. I quote "if they could come up with a solution to the limbs coming apart (again), they'd have a great bow".
I gotta chime in on this one. I shoot a prodigy that I love and is a tack driver out to 100. But I've heard so much about bowtech limb issues that it's in my head every time I pick it up. Guru when did they switch from the laminate limbs to the solid. I've heard alot of horror stories. Am I in the clear?
The truth is there were limbs that delaminated over the last few years. The models most affected were the RPM 360 and the BTX 31. I would like to say that there were more failures than is acceptable but it wasn't as bad as some on the internet say. Generally speaking, if it was going to delaminate, it happened pretty early. If you have had the bow for a while and you haven't had any problems, you should be fine. We went to the in house solid limb in full production in Nov of 2016. From that point every newly manufactured CPX (Center Pivot) Bowtech bow went out with those limbs and all CPX warranty limbs were the new process regardless of model. We have also a steady decline in warranty claims through the year which indicates that we have largely worked through those bows that were affected.
A couple things I would recommend. 1st and foremost, go online to Bowtech's web sight and make sure your bow is registered. That way if for some reason you have a problem in the future, you will be taken care of no questions asked.
What is never mentioned is the tens of thousands of CPX bows we have in the market place that have and won't have a problem.
Just a little background for anyone that is interested. Bowtech was owned by the parent company of Savage Arms. They were sow to react and did a poor job of allocating resources. However, Bowtech was purchased about 2.5 years ago by an ownership group that has come in and changed everything. Brought in professionals from the archery industry and addressed everything. Customer service, warranty repair, sales, management and operations.
For instance, they took the limb issue head on. They hired two full time engineers just for the design and manufacturing of our limbs. One from the archery industry and one who had spent his career in the aerospace industry who specialized in laminates and adhesive. They stopped buying limb billets from the main source of limbs in the industry. Spent a considerable amount of money and built a in house limb facility. We now make limbs from the raw materials to finished product.
Limbs from any manufacture and all brands have to be chemically coated with some sort of finish. If not, a limb that is not coated would start popping little tooth pick type splinters. This would not compromise the integrity of the limb but is simply the nature of the material. The limb we are now building in house was presented to us at the sales meeting. It was raw and unfinished and had been cycled 100,000 times and did not have single splinter. Our new production limbs will actually break our cycle machine before the limb would fail.
I know thats a lot to read and I am sorry for being so long winded. But I am on here quite a bit an know a lot of you guys so I felt comfortable in simply laying out the truth of the matter. Instead of "this guy told me........"
Anyone on here is welcome to PM me and ask me any questions they might have.
Bottom line is if you have shot your bow quite a bit since you bought it and you haven't had an issue, you probably won't
Still shooting my destroyer 350.
^^^Me Too^^^