I don't know about this for hunting. I hunt with 5 pin hogg it and my opinion is you will get in a pinch and it's too much to have to adjust. Especially a 16 yr old. Please give your thoughts. Thx
I started out with a single pin and hated it. I don't shoot target, but I do hunt and I can't even count the number of times deer come in so fast there is no chance to adjust. Multi pins give you one less thing you have to worry about when deer come in, and in bowhunting that's golden. I would interested in hearing the single pin user's thoughts though.
He is set at 62 lbs, so it's not like he is super flat out to 30-40 yards. I think if he wants something that can roll out to further yardage, get a 3 or 5 pin the moves on a dial. He will not be launching arrows at deer at longer distances and he does know that.... Send replies - I plan on letting him read this thread.
I shoot 62lbs and have a single pin. I set mine at 25 yards and adjust accordingly for the deer and no adjust the actual sight. I practice with it like that and I know my arrow impact so I adjust my hold depending on the distance. I haven't had any issue with it. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
If he wants a single pin go with a truglo range rover. Very nice for the price. For hunting I would set it at 20 yards and use a white or silver marker to make a 30 yard dot on the pin so if he gets a shot at 30 and doesn't have the time to adjust he still knows where to aim.
I wouldn't go this way. I had one for a season and I hated it. The slide sucked and adjustments on it were a pain. Plus the pin wasn't very bright. Put in a little extra money and get an HHA. Even the cheaper models will be better than the Range Rover. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I agree with Oly. I shoot a single pin on a darton bow at 28.5in draw 62lbs going 320fps. set to zero at 30yds. I just hold over or under depending upon my yardage guesstimate. Here's the results.
I would try talking him into getting a multiple pin Tommy Hogg. If he still is set on a single pin, he can later buy the single pin housing to put on it. I never could figure out why you would want a single pin for hunting. They would be great for 3-D or spots but why have one more thing to worry about when hunting.
Just like oly, I use a single pin locked down at 25. I practice shots from a tree stand from 15-45 yards without moving my pin. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I have a single pin Tommy Hogg and love it, easy to use and set up and a solid build Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I've had the same concern about not having time to adjust it but I've been told that its not an issue. Set it at 25 yards, any deer that is near that is dead. Any deer farther, your thinking about the yardage anyways and should remember to move it. I've heard really great things about HHA.
I am going from a 5 pin to the hha. This will be my first season trying it. My 5 pin would sometimes leave me confused with which pin to shoot, especially on those 35 yard shots in between pins. In the amount of time it would take to think about what yardage, I can have the single pin adjusted. From just target shooting in the yard, I love it. I guess we will see how hunting with it goes. If he is going to get a single pin, I wouldn't consider anything but an hha.
The guys that have said the single pin works - you are making sense. Especially the 25 yards, then a dot under the pin. Great advice that I didn't know about. I think we will let the little dog do what he wants and get the single pin. He will be purchasing the HHA PART # DS-XL5019 - he did his homework and had this sight picked out. I see no reason to hold him back on this purchase. I love it when my boys challenge themselves to do what they want.
Before he spends his money, have him take all but one pin out of his multi pin sight. Set it at 25 yards like others recommend and shoot it a while like that. If he finds that it's OK to hunt with that kind of limitation then good for him. If he finds that he would rather have multi pins for more reference points then at least he hasn't wasted a bunch of money. Personally, I like three pins set at 25, 35, 45. Sent from my Classic using Tapatalk
Chandler has 20/13 vision. The pins just look really crowded to him when he shoots. That is the reason for a single pin, he wants to remove the clutter. He has shot some with other pins removed and said he likes it better. He still shot the same groups but his preference would be for 1 pin only. He shot his first turkey this past spring and said he will hunt turkeys with bow only from now on. He told me that you can also use a dial for any odd ball yardage, which if you have the time, that would pay off blind hunting turkeys. Definitely going to let him spend the money. Thanks for all the input.
If he will feel more confident in his setup do not hold him back! I switched 2 years ago and love it! I wish I was upgrading to the king pin and if I was I would send you mine free of charge. Someone on here sold it to me for $30 so I couldn't sell it for what it's worth on here. Would feel bad lol. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk