Tell you what happened. They spent big bucks on a cam that came up short. Rather than spend the money to redesign the cam the install stops. WoW
Why, because a company expects someone to follow simple directions? Give me a break.
Do you own one? Have you looked closely at the design? Have you seen and felt the performance?
I know, you shoot "Another brand" right?.
*nevermind you answered that question....there's a shock.
Why don't you explain exactly how this cam system comes up short since you are obviously an expert on them?
God forbid we actually expect a person to be responsible for their actions.....wow there's a new concept in this sue happy age.
If a person can understand that the only way they can lock these cams out is to basically ignore all info provided and remove the stop peg entirely,OR to mess with the string and cable lengths. Both of which it clearly states
don't do. There is ZERO danger of using these bows above or beyond any other bow on the market,so is there a reason you are trying to make it out to be a handgrenade?
If you do something very wrong, and contrary to the clear written instructions on both the bow AND the manual, you wind up with locked out cams and a need for a bow press to unlock them.......not thermo nuclear detonation.
Every bow manual states how many turns a person should turn their limb bolts out to avoid popping a limb........oooohhh, maybe we should re-engineer limb bolts so that we can't be responsible for turning them ourselves because we might mess up our bow.Boy I guess all bow companies are falling short on limb bolt design.
Maybe Mathews should include a warning that says "Hey don't stick your head in between the string and cables when you release an arrow, your neck might get locked at 100%."
Maybe Hoyt should include a warning sticker that says "Release the string not the bow"