SinoArt 58" Takedown Recurve Bow Bamboo Limbs Archery Right and Left Handed Riser Bow for Hunting Target Shooting 25-65Lbs (Right Hand, 65Lbs)








Key features
- •Select the right-hand bow or left-hand bow from the Hand Orientation options.HAND ORIENTATION: A right handed bow will be held in your left hand and the string pulled with the right hand. Left handed bows are held in the right hand and pulled with the left hand.
- •Limbs are bamboo with Black Fiberglass,Introduction of German laminate Technology, offer the best toughness and power for the bow.
- •MORE COMFORTABLE EXPERIEBCE - Ergonomically designed with Impressive rounded edges and a fine finished wooden handle,Extremely Comfortable Grip.
- •FEATURES -With the Takedown feature you will always be able to change your limb to increase the weight as you grow or decrease the weight to give to you to practice. For best experience we recommend shooting this Hunting Bow with a real feather arrows.
- •Package Contents: 1x Wood Riser, 2x Limbs, 1x 16 Strands String, 1x Stringer, 1x Fur Rest Pad, 2x String Nocks, 1x pair of string silencer
SinoArt 58" Takedown Recurve Bow Bamboo Limbs Archery Right and Left Handed Riser Bow for Hunting Target Shooting 25-65Lbs (Right Hand, 65Lbs)
List Price: $130.94$117.85DEALYou Save: $13.09 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 24, 2026In Stock (1)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers4.7
out of 5
Based on 30 reviews
5★
90%
4★
10%
3★
0%
2★
0%
1★
0%
This is an awsome little bow.
Randy J.✓ Verified Purchase•October 27, 2023
The first pic is at 35 yards the second pic is at 45 yards the third is at 60 yards. Most folks post pics of the bow. I wanted to show what it can do. I have this bow in 65 lbs. Shooting bare bow straight off the shelf I'm accurate out to 60 yards consistently and still have plenty of energy at that range. I'm pushing arrows with a total weight of about 500 grains at 200 fps. I love this bow. A couple of the cheep rubber string silencers and it's very quiet. I will caution you on one thing. 65# is way too much weight for most people. I'm not a big man but when I was about 12 I picked up my dads 45lb recurve and shot it alot. As I got older I moved on to compounds. Just recently decided to go back to a recurve. I started back with a 55# edge good bow but when I came across this one that's 4 inches shorter and 65 lbs at the price and the reviews I couldn't pass it up. I've got some work to do for deer season. 65 is alot to hold and get off a clean release. My only misses are due to shakey arms lol. You wont go wrong it's a great bow. It comes with a stringing tool use it!! It's not just for safety but it allows you to feel of the string and make sure your centered in the limbs before you put full pressure on the string.
I believe this is a perfect entry level bow
Victor✓ Verified Purchase•October 25, 2023
First off, I've never shot a bow in my life let alone held one, so my experience in archery is absolutely 0.
Upon opening the box and taking out the riser, I was very impressed with the feel of it. There's a good weight to it, it feels solid and strong. It is a little awkward for my hands though. I'm an average size guy, 5'11" 180lbs with hopefully average size hands, but the riser feels like it's slightly too big/thick. I don't feel like it would really affect anything, it's just something for me to get used too.
Assembly took minutes, extremely easy but if you're a little confused just know the bottom limb is the one that has the draw weight and length written on it. Utilizing the stringer was a simple process as well, maybe watch a YouTube video if the directions are unclear.
Along with the bows components, stringer, and allen key, came an accessory pack of sorts which I found interesting. There appears to be 2 brass nocks, 2 strips of felt for (everything I describe is what I believe to be, I'm not 100% on the purpose of these items) silencing the string where it meets the limbs, 1 piece of square fur for setting a pivot point on the arrow rest, and 2 strips of fur (I believe it's skunk actually lol) for attaching to the string to silence it.
All this was a surprise to me because the description didn't mention any of that when I bought it, but this is all definitely a huge plus.
Next I just want to list some things/concerns that you'll still need to address before anything that probably isn't too obvious if you're new to archery as well:
- Target: go out and and actually get you something that's meant to be shot at. Trees are too hard, you need something that'll keep your arrows intact.
- Arrows: any 30in arrow should be fine for now since you're just starting. The tips should have field points on them.
- Finger tabs/gloves: I've read that repeated use of a bow without protecting your fingers can/will cause nerve damage sooner than later, I didn't know that till after I used the bow cause yeah it actually hurts your finger tips drawing the string back. Just imagine carrying some object, at whatever weight you're buying, with a thin string with just your first 3 fingers. It ain't gonna feel too good. Do your body a favor and protect it.
- Forearm protector: I bought one cause I heard horror stories, but honestly I haven't had any issues yet. I even forgot to put it on once and went through 10 arrows before I realized it. Maybe just good form, maybe I'm just lucky, I don't know but what I do know is that you wouldn't be wrong to have it. You're already saving a ton of money by buying this bow, spending $10 shouldn't break you.
Shooting the bow is definitely a new and interesting experience. I bought the 40lbs version, at my body type/build (slightly athletic), I definitely do feel the weight of the bow. Albeit, I think a significant part of that has to do with the pain in my fingers (I'll be purchasing finger gloves soon) but it does still take some effort on my part to get the bow at my anchor point.
OVERALL/TL;DR:
This bow exceeded my expectations in terms of quality. If someone handed me this bow and told me it was $500, I would've believed them. I'm very much enjoying this new endeavor and definitely have 0 regrets about purchasing this particular item.
Upon opening the box and taking out the riser, I was very impressed with the feel of it. There's a good weight to it, it feels solid and strong. It is a little awkward for my hands though. I'm an average size guy, 5'11" 180lbs with hopefully average size hands, but the riser feels like it's slightly too big/thick. I don't feel like it would really affect anything, it's just something for me to get used too.
Assembly took minutes, extremely easy but if you're a little confused just know the bottom limb is the one that has the draw weight and length written on it. Utilizing the stringer was a simple process as well, maybe watch a YouTube video if the directions are unclear.
Along with the bows components, stringer, and allen key, came an accessory pack of sorts which I found interesting. There appears to be 2 brass nocks, 2 strips of felt for (everything I describe is what I believe to be, I'm not 100% on the purpose of these items) silencing the string where it meets the limbs, 1 piece of square fur for setting a pivot point on the arrow rest, and 2 strips of fur (I believe it's skunk actually lol) for attaching to the string to silence it.
All this was a surprise to me because the description didn't mention any of that when I bought it, but this is all definitely a huge plus.
Next I just want to list some things/concerns that you'll still need to address before anything that probably isn't too obvious if you're new to archery as well:
- Target: go out and and actually get you something that's meant to be shot at. Trees are too hard, you need something that'll keep your arrows intact.
- Arrows: any 30in arrow should be fine for now since you're just starting. The tips should have field points on them.
- Finger tabs/gloves: I've read that repeated use of a bow without protecting your fingers can/will cause nerve damage sooner than later, I didn't know that till after I used the bow cause yeah it actually hurts your finger tips drawing the string back. Just imagine carrying some object, at whatever weight you're buying, with a thin string with just your first 3 fingers. It ain't gonna feel too good. Do your body a favor and protect it.
- Forearm protector: I bought one cause I heard horror stories, but honestly I haven't had any issues yet. I even forgot to put it on once and went through 10 arrows before I realized it. Maybe just good form, maybe I'm just lucky, I don't know but what I do know is that you wouldn't be wrong to have it. You're already saving a ton of money by buying this bow, spending $10 shouldn't break you.
Shooting the bow is definitely a new and interesting experience. I bought the 40lbs version, at my body type/build (slightly athletic), I definitely do feel the weight of the bow. Albeit, I think a significant part of that has to do with the pain in my fingers (I'll be purchasing finger gloves soon) but it does still take some effort on my part to get the bow at my anchor point.
OVERALL/TL;DR:
This bow exceeded my expectations in terms of quality. If someone handed me this bow and told me it was $500, I would've believed them. I'm very much enjoying this new endeavor and definitely have 0 regrets about purchasing this particular item.
I bought it for my so he says it shoots great!!!
Robyn Jordan✓ Verified Purchase•October 14, 2023
I like this bows shooting and gap at 30 yards the gap on this bow is about 7 inches high from the bulls eye but right dead center as long as you don't pluck the string... flexes well and draws smooth it is a little louder than I'd like it makes a pretty good thunk upon release of arrow but over all a great bow with a great finish and at $110 after tax ya can't beat the price
I believe this is a perfect entry level bow
Victor✓ Verified Purchase•October 11, 2023
First off, I've never shot a bow in my life let alone held one, so my experience in archery is absolutely 0.
Upon opening the box and taking out the riser, I was very impressed with the feel of it. There's a good weight to it, it feels solid and strong. It is a little awkward for my hands though. I'm an average size guy, 5'11" 180lbs with hopefully average size hands, but the riser feels like it's slightly too big/thick. I don't feel like it would really affect anything, it's just something for me to get used too.
Assembly took minutes, extremely easy but if you're a little confused just know the bottom limb is the one that has the draw weight and length written on it. Utilizing the stringer was a simple process as well, maybe watch a YouTube video if the directions are unclear.
Along with the bows components, stringer, and allen key, came an accessory pack of sorts which I found interesting. There appears to be 2 brass nocks, 2 strips of felt for (everything I describe is what I believe to be, I'm not 100% on the purpose of these items) silencing the string where it meets the limbs, 1 piece of square fur for setting a pivot point on the arrow rest, and 2 strips of fur (I believe it's skunk actually lol) for attaching to the string to silence it.
All this was a surprise to me because the description didn't mention any of that when I bought it, but this is all definitely a huge plus.
Next I just want to list some things/concerns that you'll still need to address before anything that probably isn't too obvious if you're new to archery as well:
- Target: go out and and actually get you something that's meant to be shot at. Trees are too hard, you need something that'll keep your arrows intact.
- Arrows: any 30in arrow should be fine for now since you're just starting. The tips should have field points on them.
- Finger tabs/gloves: I've read that repeated use of a bow without protecting your fingers can/will cause nerve damage sooner than later, I didn't know that till after I used the bow cause yeah it actually hurts your finger tips drawing the string back. Just imagine carrying some object, at whatever weight you're buying, with a thin string with just your first 3 fingers. It ain't gonna feel too good. Do your body a favor and protect it.
- Forearm protector: I bought one cause I heard horror stories, but honestly I haven't had any issues yet. I even forgot to put it on once and went through 10 arrows before I realized it. Maybe just good form, maybe I'm just lucky, I don't know but what I do know is that you wouldn't be wrong to have it. You're already saving a ton of money by buying this bow, spending $10 shouldn't break you.
Shooting the bow is definitely a new and interesting experience. I bought the 40lbs version, at my body type/build (slightly athletic), I definitely do feel the weight of the bow. Albeit, I think a significant part of that has to do with the pain in my fingers (I'll be purchasing finger gloves soon) but it does still take some effort on my part to get the bow at my anchor point.
OVERALL/TL;DR:
This bow exceeded my expectations in terms of quality. If someone handed me this bow and told me it was $500, I would've believed them. I'm very much enjoying this new endeavor and definitely have 0 regrets about purchasing this particular item.
Upon opening the box and taking out the riser, I was very impressed with the feel of it. There's a good weight to it, it feels solid and strong. It is a little awkward for my hands though. I'm an average size guy, 5'11" 180lbs with hopefully average size hands, but the riser feels like it's slightly too big/thick. I don't feel like it would really affect anything, it's just something for me to get used too.
Assembly took minutes, extremely easy but if you're a little confused just know the bottom limb is the one that has the draw weight and length written on it. Utilizing the stringer was a simple process as well, maybe watch a YouTube video if the directions are unclear.
Along with the bows components, stringer, and allen key, came an accessory pack of sorts which I found interesting. There appears to be 2 brass nocks, 2 strips of felt for (everything I describe is what I believe to be, I'm not 100% on the purpose of these items) silencing the string where it meets the limbs, 1 piece of square fur for setting a pivot point on the arrow rest, and 2 strips of fur (I believe it's skunk actually lol) for attaching to the string to silence it.
All this was a surprise to me because the description didn't mention any of that when I bought it, but this is all definitely a huge plus.
Next I just want to list some things/concerns that you'll still need to address before anything that probably isn't too obvious if you're new to archery as well:
- Target: go out and and actually get you something that's meant to be shot at. Trees are too hard, you need something that'll keep your arrows intact.
- Arrows: any 30in arrow should be fine for now since you're just starting. The tips should have field points on them.
- Finger tabs/gloves: I've read that repeated use of a bow without protecting your fingers can/will cause nerve damage sooner than later, I didn't know that till after I used the bow cause yeah it actually hurts your finger tips drawing the string back. Just imagine carrying some object, at whatever weight you're buying, with a thin string with just your first 3 fingers. It ain't gonna feel too good. Do your body a favor and protect it.
- Forearm protector: I bought one cause I heard horror stories, but honestly I haven't had any issues yet. I even forgot to put it on once and went through 10 arrows before I realized it. Maybe just good form, maybe I'm just lucky, I don't know but what I do know is that you wouldn't be wrong to have it. You're already saving a ton of money by buying this bow, spending $10 shouldn't break you.
Shooting the bow is definitely a new and interesting experience. I bought the 40lbs version, at my body type/build (slightly athletic), I definitely do feel the weight of the bow. Albeit, I think a significant part of that has to do with the pain in my fingers (I'll be purchasing finger gloves soon) but it does still take some effort on my part to get the bow at my anchor point.
OVERALL/TL;DR:
This bow exceeded my expectations in terms of quality. If someone handed me this bow and told me it was $500, I would've believed them. I'm very much enjoying this new endeavor and definitely have 0 regrets about purchasing this particular item.
Amended return. 1st bow was defective but the seller went out of their way to make it right.
RTF✓ Verified Purchase•October 10, 2023
Bow was defective. It had a loud 'crack' sound when shooting and shot arrows erratically. Could not tune the bow to quiet it down and could not tune an arrow to shoot properly. I put the limbs on another riser and same thing. I suspect the limbs were out of tiller. I tried to contact the manufacturer but did not get a response. I would have been happy to receive another set of limbs to try out and keep the bow. After not hearing back from the seller I initiated a return from Amazon which was promptly authorized. Thanks Amazon. After reading my review the seller contacted me and said they had not received a message from me through Amazon. There is an after-sale card included with the bow that leaves an email address to contact the seller if there is a problem. Since I didn't initially want to return the bow, just receive a new pair of limbs I tried to contact the seller through the email they provided. The representative from the company told me that maybe there was a problem with their email and asked if I would be willing to try another bow. They promptly sent me another bow and it was here in just a couple days. The riser on this one was a little different color that I actually liked better than the first. The fit between the limbs and riser were much better, no gaps that I can see and the limbs fit the riser well. I installed a set of my own string silencers, twisted the string up to set the brace height at 8 1/4", and set the nock point at 1/2" above square. Bow shoots really well with Easton 2016's without any further adjustment. It is still a little louder than my other bows but I attribute that to the string. I have a new Flemish twist string on the way. Over all this product is a good value. I would have left five stars if the replacement bow had been the first one. The seller went out of their way to make me a satisfied customer. Thanks.
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