Those quivers aren't supposed to mount on the limbs. They mount over the fadeouts at the base of the limbs. If you mount them on the limbs you will definitely interfere with the way the limbs bend and that will definitely affect performance and you'd likely need a different spine arrow too. And the limb action would transfer to the quiver and cause it to whip your arrows together and make noise.
Correctly mounted over the fadeouts though, I think they're as good as any other bow quiver.
If you have a takedown that won't let you put the mounts over the fadeouts, put them as close to the riser as you can, where the limbs bend the least. In that case, I think it's better to get a quiver that mounts directly to the riser.
My only gripe about bow quivers, especially on light bows (physical weight, not draw weight), is they make the bow feel odd and unbalanced. But I guess they do add mass weight and make the bow more stable. Maybe if I kept a bow quiver on my bows I'd get used to it and learn to like 'em. But I'm too hardheaded to do it.