Other than that, you have the same length quiver of 19 3/4″ as well as the same length between the hood and gripper of 18″ that we are all used to. I know right?! It’s the same concept, just a slightly different design and it works like a charm. This mount makes it so your quiver sits even tighter to your bow! Being a 1/2 inch longer than their standard bracket, it provides better clearance than before. What’s different really?īesides the obvious additional arrow slots that you are getting, there is one difference that I am particularly stoked on and that is the new XL mounting bracket. Paired with TightSpot’s Iron Clad Gaurantee and I am sold. The quiver has the same design, just with extra arrow slots, so I feel better about how many arrows I have on my backcountry hunts, haha. This has the same great construction that comes with all TightSpot quivers and the addition to the quiver is really so simple it’s hardly noticeable. Definitely not gonna leave you in pain from lugging around the extra weight. This 7 arrow quiver is pretty much identical to its 5 arrow sibling. My first impressions weren’t really much to think about to tell you the truth. I thought, “Could this solve my running out of arrows problem?” I knew that I had to get my hands on this thing immediately for my backcountry endeavors. It was a day to remember for sure.Īt the start of this year, I found out that TightSpot was actually coming out with a 7 arrow quiver. Just this past December, I was able to do just that and brought home my first archery buck. I loved the idea of the quiver being so much more closer to the riser, which would make it a lot easier to lay my bow in my lap while crab crawling my way down to a bedded mule deer. Like a lot of folks, I have been carrying a 5 arrow quiver for quite some time and as of a few years ago, that quiver has always been a TightSpot. This is especially true when I am backpacked into an area and have only the arrows that are in my quiver. I know that might sound hilarious, but it’s the truth for me. These are just observations that may help other folks with Ventum and Ventum Pros with similar rest/sight configurations and kick off productive discussion.I don’t know about you, but whenever I miss an animal and lose an arrow, I start hoping I don’t run out of arrows. I am NOT looking for any “advice” on how to get more movement or travel out of the quiver, nor am I trying to do any “home bowsmithing” to force this setup to work better. ![]() In the meantime… I’ll continue to shoot without a bow mounted quiver and that Tight Spot will likely find itself on the auction block fairly soon. With new strings on order, I may also get my hands on the new Hamskea Epsilon and maximize the benefits of inline mounting solutions. Most likely, though, I’ll wait for Hoyt to start shipping their new Carbon Superlite quivers and not look back. I like the Pivot 2.0 (which TS NEEDS to start offering with a tan or green hood for $220) as it will let me get my arrows way back and way inboard. Likewise, If you’re shopping for a new setup and planning to use the new sight mount, you may run into interference with a one-piece Tight Spot that limit the configuration options of the quiver.ĬOULD it be made to work with washers or shims? Yeah… I suppose so, but it seems counterproductive to apply a $5 bodge to shoehorn a $150 quiver on a $2000 bow build when other quiver options exist or will be on the market soon. If you’re using the same or a similar combination of pic rail sight and limb-driven rest on a new Hoyt and looking to reuse an existing Tight Spot, you’re gonna find it’ll be… a… tight fit (sorry, had to).
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