attention bowhunters (rangefinder)

danastles

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hello
im looking for opinions and reviews on bowhunting specific rangefinders. im in the market but dont wanna spend the big bucks if i dont have to. please let me know what you use and how well it works if you have the time.
thanks,
dan
 
Don't fall for the whole ARC scam. Totally not needed in archery situations. Unless you are hunting mountains maybe.
 
Don't fall for the whole ARC scam. Totally not needed in archery situations. Unless you are hunting mountains maybe.

I have an eight year old Bushnell Scout. Nice little unit, accurate out to about 400 yards, and when I hunt from a treestand, I just subtract a couple of yards and I am usually right on the money.
 
I am happy with my Bushnell 800, but would like to get one with arc. I don't know if it is necessary or not. But am told there can be up to a 7 or 8 yard difference from a 15 ft stand.
 
I am happy with my Bushnell 800, but would like to get one with arc. I don't know if it is necessary or not. But am told there can be up to a 7 or 8 yard difference from a 15 ft stand.

I find that incline makes more of a difference when hunting from treestands with a bow than it does hunting with a rifle.
 
Sit in your 15 foot high stand. Pick a big tree straight out, horizontally from you and range it. Then range the base of the same tree. At 15 feet up and under 40 yards out, there is not enough to make a difference.
 
Sit in your 15 foot high stand. Pick a big tree straight out, horizontally from you and range it. Then range the base of the same tree. At 15 feet up and under 40 yards out, there is not enough to make a difference.

Is that all it calculates? I understood it would take the average drop of the average arrow and throw that in the mix too. An arrow doesn't drop nearly as much when shooting down at an angle. Best thing to do is practice at the height of your stand an various yardages and KNOW where to aim.
 
Is that all it calculates? I understood it would take the average drop of the average arrow and throw that in the mix too. An arrow doesn't drop nearly as much when shooting down at an angle. Best thing to do is practice at the height of your stand an various yardages and KNOW where to aim.

You have the right idea. You need to shoot for the (level) horizontal distance to the target. Pythagorean theorem applies. Your vertical distance from the ground is A, your range to target is C and your shooting distance is B. Basically, pretend you're on the ground level with your target and shoot for that distance. See, your actual (downward) distance to target is further than your horizontal distance, so you get more horizontal range from being higher up.

To answer the OP's question, I've got a Bushnell Yardage Pro 450 on my xbow. Made a mount so that it sits on top of the scope and works nicely. Got it at BP for $169US. I mean really, within 50 yards, it can't be that far off! At longer distances (300yds+) it gets finicky with certain surfaces like grass. It likes treelines and rocks (and deer).
 
You have the right idea. You need to shoot for the (level) horizontal distance to the target. Pythagorean theorem applies. Your vertical distance from the ground is A, your range to target is C and your shooting distance is B. Basically, pretend you're on the ground level with your target and shoot for that distance. See, your actual (downward) distance to target is further than your horizontal distance, so you get more horizontal range from being higher up.

To answer the OP's question, I've got a Bushnell Yardage Pro 450 on my xbow. Made a mount so that it sits on top of the scope and works nicely. Got it at BP for $169US. I mean really, within 50 yards, it can't be that far off! At longer distances (300yds+) it gets finicky with certain surfaces like grass. It likes treelines and rocks (and deer).

Or measured distance from the foot of the tree your in to the target:D
 
Ok Kool, I just figured it also took into account the arc of your arrow, at level ground an average arrow can drop over a foot from 40-50 yds but at 15 ft high that might only be6 inches.
 
Ok Kool, I just figured it also took into account the arc of your arrow, at level ground an average arrow can drop over a foot from 40-50 yds but at 15 ft high that might only be6 inches.

40 yards is 40 yards, regardless of whether you are in a tree or on the ground. The rangefider does not know the speed of your arrow so it can not compensate for drop, it has a built inclimeter and does the math to figure out the true horizontal distance. That is the distance that counts.
 
Ok Kool, I just figured it also took into account the arc of your arrow, at level ground an average arrow can drop over a foot from 40-50 yds but at 15 ft high that might only be6 inches.

No, nothing to do with your equipment. Just takes the trigonometry out of figuring out the actual range vs the effective range.

Range the tree, at eye level, and use that range to shoot at the base of it.

I just range out the area beforehand, so i have a really good idea what the ranges are. I figure that leaves me with one less thing to worry about when the deer walks into my 'zone'.

Cheers
Trev
 
I'm a bowhunter and I shoot a fair bit of 3D. One thing is for certain, a bowhunter who practices heavily can manage without a rangefinder at all. A bowhunter who practices an average amount needs a normal rangefinder. A bowhunter who practices very little needs an arc system. Any hunter owes the animal at least a minimum of respect to be absolutely certain of his or her shot.

Taking advice from a rifle or shotgun hunter is marginally useful as the velocity is massively different(~280fps versus ~2800fps) and the distances are also incredibly different(~30yards compared to ~200yards). The different discipline requires an adjusted approach.

I bowhunt without a rangefinder, it will limit some of my shots I'm sure. But with a grocery store on almost every corner... I don't need to drag something out, I'll be just fine to see something walk under me.
 
I find it easier and much cheaper to measure distances to objects while on the ground and commit them to memory. Also shooting lots of 3D tournaments helps.
 
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