ORIGINAL: Drizzu213
Sorry to hear that your twin cams are so slow not my fault,also is'nt the bowtech blacknight II the fastest bow on earth (supposedly),and I believe it is a twin cam so please stop trying to start problems when it's obvious you know very little about bows!
Ok, I'm back. MMM grilled boneless pork chops, mashed taters and sweet corn

. I could use a nap now.
Wow, I wonder how that read before you edited it? Why would you conceive what I said as trying to start problems? You made a few statements, I disagreed with them. Isn't that what this place is all about? I am not allowed to have a differing opinion as you do? Well I guess I know better now don't I. If I try to start problems you won't have any trouble seeing it, trust me.
In my PM I pretty much said what you guys have. Just because you have duals doesn't mean you will have a faster bow. It really depends on bow design. And I believe most current true duals are medium cams that are actually slower than most hybrids or singles. I suppose a dual could have the potential to produce more power. I'm not an engineer though so I can't say for sure. I believe there have been some pretty darn fast single cams though, they just didn't market very well. As a matter of fact the BK's didn't stick around for very long really. To get that kind of speed you need to give up some things. Like a smooth draw and a forgiving set up.
Bowtechs used to have the logo "The fastest bows in the World" and Mathews touted the Black Max as "The fastest bow on the Planet". Even though it was only about 330 fps. Which was probably pretty fast for the time it came out. And the Black Max turbo cam was rated at 340+ fps, and it's a single cam. Then Bowtech was making single cams that were as fast, they even had a 3 cam bow, parker also used the technology for a while. I think both were in the 330 fps range. And of course the BKII was in the 340-350 range.
And I really wasn't joking with my comment about the strings. If you are having problems with tuning your duals you should seriously look into better strings. Gibblet could probably set you up with some for a good price. My bowtech has not moved since the day I picked it up as far tuning and string creep goes. And I even broke a couple of strands screwing around. Quality strings are a great thing.
I would really like to hear Len's opinion on this, but I doubt he will give it. He has probably forgotten more about archery in the past few months than I could hope to know.
Paul