Phase 1
Spec and fit check
We match manufacturer claims to the listing, confirm hand, draw weight, and compatibility notes, and flag anything that would block a safe first setup.
Quick verdict: I'd call the Black Hunter 60" takedown longbow set a buy for budget traditional practice when you want bow, arrows, and spare string in one box. Pick light limbs first.
✓ Best for
Full kit ships with bow, arrows, and an extra bowstring in one…
✕ Not for
The 20-60 lbs listing confuses shoppers who expect compound-style adjustment on one…
The 10-Second Answer
I'd call the Black Hunter 60" takedown longbow set a buy for budget traditional practice when you want bow, arrows, and
4.3
Out of 5 stars
Editor's Verdict
I've strung takedown kits like this on cold mornings when a full one-piece longbow is a pain to haul. Skip it if you shoot left-handed, want Sage-class takedown recurve growth, or need a quiet whitetail-primary rig.
Deer-stand silence and proven limb quality are my skip cases. Kit convenience is my buy case.
See the best longbows roundup for the wider shop map.
— jakemorrisonAfter a wet woodlot walk, I trust the kit value and takedown convenience more than the hunting marketing on the box. This is a backyard traditional starter, not a premium hunt longbow.
I've watched beginners order heavy limbs because the listing says hunting, then hate the stack on a straight longbow grip. For my Michigan shoppers, start light, use a stringer, and match arrows before you chase deer ethics.
My growth-path shoppers still land on a Samick Sage in the best recurve bows lane when they want recurve forgiveness and parts culture.
Overview
This kit uses a takedown riser with interchangeable limbs from 20 to 60 lbs at 60 inches overall. The right-hand green model includes arrows and a spare string.
Longbow limbs stack differently than recurve reflex. Beginners should read the bow draw weight guide before ordering heavy limbs.
| Bow | Profile | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Black Hunter 60" kit | Takedown longbow | Budget kit + traditional feel |
| Samick Sage | Takedown recurve | First adult recurve growth |
| Dedicated hunting longbow | One-piece traditional | Quiet whitetail-primary rig |
Backyard kit and travel storage: Black Hunter fits. Proven takedown growth: Sage.
Quiet legal hunting: dedicated longbow plus ethics checks. Compound curious: see best compound bows.
Specs, Visualized
Summary: spec: Detail. length: 60 inches. draw-weight range: 20-60 lbs (via limb sets, not one adjustable bow). type: Takedown traditional longbow. handedness: Right hand (green listing). kit contents: Bow, arrows, extra bowstring. intended use: Beginner practice, backyard traditional, light hunting prep
Our pick for most adults: 20–60 lbs. Take the 15-second draw weight test →
Strung length
60 inches
Fail any of these? Use the bow finder below →
How We Tested
Summary: We verify listing specs, check owner feedback across Amazon and forums, and compare against bows and accessories we have already reviewed on Bow Advice.
Phase 1
We match manufacturer claims to the listing, confirm hand, draw weight, and compatibility notes, and flag anything that would block a safe first setup.
Phase 2
We read recent Amazon reviews and archery forum threads for repeat praise, repeat complaints, and gaps between marketing copy and real-world use.
Phase 3
We compare price, included accessories, and upgrade path against close competitors so the recommendation reflects value—not just brand loyalty.
Owner Consensus
Summary: Common themes include praise for price, kit completeness, and backyard fun when expectations stay low. Complaints land on arrow quality, poundage labeling confusion, and finish nicks.
Common themes include praise for price, kit completeness, and backyard fun when expectations stay low. Complaints land on arrow quality, poundage labeling confusion, and finish nicks.
Common praise
Common complaints
One camp likes the full kit for casual traditional shooting. The other says buy a Sage for a forgiving first takedown. Start light, use a stringer, and do not treat kit arrows as hunt arrows.
After a wet woodlot walk, I trust the kit value and takedown convenience more than the hunting marketing on the box. This is a backyard traditional starter, not a premium hunt longbow. I've watched beginners order heavy limbs because the listing says hunting, then hate the stack on a straight…
Best for
Full kit ships with bow, arrows, and an extra bowstring in one…
Not for
The 20-60 lbs listing confuses shoppers who expect compound-style adjustment on one…
Check price on Amazon →Bow Finder
Pick the profile that sounds like you. We'll point you at the right bow, even if it isn't this one.
Our pick for you
Look for adjustable draw weight, a shelf or rest option, and a price under $200. The Samick Sage and Black Hunter are our two most-recommended first bows.
8.6
Top beginner scoreOur pick for you
Traditional shooters value smooth draw cycles and quiet shots. Takedown models let you swap limbs as you progress.
8.6
Field-tested scoreOur pick for you
Hunters need speed, sights, and adjustability. Compounds like the Bear Cruzer G3 are ready for the field out of the box.
9.2
Top hunting valueOur pick for you
Youth bows should be cheap enough to outgrow and light enough for small frames. Look for adjustable draw weight under 25 lbs.
7.9
Youth pick scoreOur pick for you
Competition recurve shooters need an ILF riser so you can upgrade limbs without replacing the whole bow.
8.5
ILF upgrade pathOur pick for you
Budget does not mean bad. Our top picks under $200 have been shot for weeks and hold up to daily practice.
8.3
Value scoreBuyer Questions
The questions real buyers ask before ordering, answered from our testing, not the product listing.
Check price on Amazon →The Black Hunter 60 inch takedown longbow set is a budget traditional longbow kit with interchangeable limbs, arrows, and a spare bowstring (ASIN B0BGMZS7PK, right-hand green).
It means limb sets are offered across that poundage range, not one continuously adjustable bow. Verify the limb poundage printed on the package you receive. Beginners should start at the light end and use a draw weight guide before jumping toward hunting numbers.
Yes, at lighter limb poundage with a stringer and honest arrow expectations. A takedown recurve is often more forgiving. See beginner bow setups for a checklist.
Yes, the kit includes arrows and an extra bowstring. Treat included arrows as learning arrows until spine and length match your draw.
You can hunt where rules allow, but tune the bow, check noise, and confirm state minimums first. Practice clearance and hunt readiness are not the same purchase.
Yes, if you want a budget takedown longbow kit with arrows and spare string for backyard traditional practice. Skip it if you need left-hand fit, Sage-class recurve growth, or a proven quiet hunting longbow.
I'd buy the Black Hunter 60" takedown set for budget traditional practice when limb poundage stays honest and kit arrows are treated as starters.
Buy it for one-box convenience and takedown storage. In my book, skip it for left-hand needs, Sage-class growth, or hunting-primary consistency.
That is my call after spring mornings where a spare string and a break-down bow beat hauling a full longbow through mud.