Now I' m curious
#1
Thread Starter
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: CWD Central, WI.
Posts: 2,062
Now I' m curious
Why couldn' t a guy put a couple of inches of serving on the string or cable at the area that moves through the cable slide? A reply in Racks thread on WC strings got me thinking. Especially with those MZE slides. Seems to me a tight serving in this area might prevent excessive cable wear. Shouldn' t really have any noticable speed loss if they slide through with no friction. The serving would hold more string wax I' d think. Looks like theres enough material in the cable slide to allow a person to open it up some if theres a bit of friction. String manufacturers will never put it there. They want you tearing up those cables.[]
#5
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Alvo Nebraska USA
Posts: 2,057
RE: Now I' m curious
I think it would cause lots of problems wearing the slide. It would be like a fine toothed saw going through the slide even if it was waxed. Maybe what would be better would be heat shrink tubing in that area but I don' t think I want to heat the strands of that material hot enough to get it to shrink and bond. What you have is what is best IMO
#6
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Warren PA USA
Posts: 1,512
RE: Now I' m curious
I' m not very good at serving materials, but there' s a material out there that' s very small diameter and very smooth, silky smooth, when served very tightly? I' ve see the stuff used, but can' t remember the name. Maybe that would be a good investment.
#9
Giant Nontypical
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 9,175
RE: Now I' m curious
I had a Bear compound a long time ago that used a fastflight string hooked direct to the cams, but used steel cables. That always made more sense to me than having these creepy synthetic cables. That thing never went out of time. Never could keep the limbs from busting, but it never went out of time.
#10
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Stratford CT
Posts: 80
RE: Now I' m curious
.019 halo is thin and very slick. I think it would probably work so well that you wouldn' t need a cable slide at all and could just keep the cables directly against the guard, which was pretty standard in days gone by.