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<blockquote data-quote="uncle_loue" data-source="post: 5139288" data-attributes="member: 7092"><p>I've had dirt cheap crossbows (PSE Copperhead) and midrange crossbows (Carbon Express Covert SLS). They both were silly easy to shoot accurately at archery distances. Neither ever required any unusual or overly burdensome maintenance. I think the greatest gain in spending more money on a crossbow is portability. The more expensive models do the same thing the cheap ones do; they simply do it in a lighter and often slimmer profile package. Now that I've been saddle hunting for 3 seasons the profile has become more of an issue. Toward that end my next crossbow will likely be a Hickory Creek vertical crossbow. Looks like a small mom n' pop business but I've seen good reviews that the owner is responsive and helpful.</p><p></p><p>[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.drawloc.com/[/URL]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="uncle_loue, post: 5139288, member: 7092"] I've had dirt cheap crossbows (PSE Copperhead) and midrange crossbows (Carbon Express Covert SLS). They both were silly easy to shoot accurately at archery distances. Neither ever required any unusual or overly burdensome maintenance. I think the greatest gain in spending more money on a crossbow is portability. The more expensive models do the same thing the cheap ones do; they simply do it in a lighter and often slimmer profile package. Now that I've been saddle hunting for 3 seasons the profile has become more of an issue. Toward that end my next crossbow will likely be a Hickory Creek vertical crossbow. Looks like a small mom n' pop business but I've seen good reviews that the owner is responsive and helpful. [URL unfurl="true"]https://www.drawloc.com/[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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