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: The **Sanlida Noble Standard** is a complete wooden takedown recurve kit for right-hand youth and adult beginners who want sight, rest, arrows, and target paper in one package. I'd buy it when you value kit completeness and will pick length and poundage to match the shooter today, not five years from now.
✓ Best for
Full kit includes sight, arrow rest, stringer, tab, quiver, six carbon arrows,…
✕ Not for
Right-hand only closes the door for left-hand shooters immediately.
The 10-Second Answer
The **Sanlida Noble Standard** is a complete wooden takedown recurve kit for right-hand youth and adult beginners who wa
A parent who hates three separate Amazon orders gets real value from one coordinated box.
Marketing says "competition" but this is honest target-practice territory at kit price.
4.3
Out of 5 stars
Editor's Verdict
I'd skip it for left-hand shooters, buyers who want a deep ILF upgrade path like Samick Sage, or anyone who needs hunt-primary tuning out of the box.
Best for target-focused beginners who want one-box setup at a fair kit price. My bottom line: buy for accessory completeness and traditional wood feel; pass if you need left-hand fit or long-term limb ecosystem.
See recurve bows for beginners for the wider starter lane.
{{LASSO:B0C1SDS564}}
— ambermitchellI review a lot of "starter kits" that leave out the one item that blocks the first session. Sanlida Noble is one of the cleaner full-box listings I've seen at this price because sight, rest, and target paper ship with the bow.
I'd still add an arm guard before a youth shoots a full week of ends. I'd also read the length dropdown twice because a 70-inch bow in small hands teaches bad habits fast.
When a reader asks about growth, I point serious upgraders to Samick Sage in the best recurve bows roundup. Noble fits buyers who want traditional wood and one-checkout convenience.
Overview
Sanlida positions Noble Standard as an entry target archery package with laminated wood riser, maple-core limbs, and accessory bundle. You choose length and poundage on the listing before checkout.
Use the bow draw weight guide before you click the heaviest option in your length row.
| Kit | Profile | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Sanlida Noble Standard | Full wooden takedown kit | Youth and adult target beginners |
| Samick Sage | ILF takedown standard | Upgrade path and shop support |
| Bow-only budget takedown | Bare bow | Buyers who already own accessories |
Want one-box traditional start: Noble. Want limb ecosystem: Sage. Already own tab, rest, and arrows: bow-only listing.
The limited lifetime warranty on Sanlida gear is a trust signal I mention when readers compare no-name kits.
See target bow setups and beginner bow setups for what to add beyond the box.
Specs, Visualized
Summary: length (rh): Draw weight range. 48 inch: 10–20 lbs (2 lb steps). 54 inch: 10–26 lbs. 62 inch: 12–32 lbs. 66 inch: 12–38 lbs. 68 inch: 12–40 lbs. 70 inch: 14–42 lbs
Our pick for most adults: 10–20 lbs. Take the 15-second draw weight test →
Strung length
48"
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: Buyer themes praise complete kit value, traditional wood look, and light draw options for kids. Complaints mention sight adjustment learning curve, finish nicks, and poundage feeling stiff at the top…
Buyer themes praise complete kit value, traditional wood look, and light draw options for kids. Complaints mention sight adjustment learning curve, finish nicks, and poundage feeling stiff at the top of each length range.
Common praise
Common complaints
Community threads call Sanlida Noble a solid "buy the whole box" option versus piecing Amazon parts. Skeptics still say Sage wins long-term; kit fans win on convenience and price.
I review a lot of "starter kits" that leave out the one item that blocks the first session. Sanlida Noble is one of the cleaner full-box listings I've seen at this price because sight, rest, and target paper ship with the bow. I'd still add an arm guard before a…
Best for
Full kit includes sight, arrow rest, stringer, tab, quiver, six carbon arrows,…
Not for
Right-hand only closes the door for left-hand shooters immediately.
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 Sanlida Noble Standard is a right-hand wooden takedown recurve kit (ASIN B0C1SDS564) with lengths from 48 to 70 inches, draw weights from 10 to 42 pounds, and a full accessory bundle including sight, rest, arrows, and target paper.
Youth and adult beginners who want target practice or light competition prep with traditional wood feel. Pick length and poundage for the shooter today, not maximum growth headroom.
48, 54, 62, 66, 68, and 70 inch right-hand options. Each length has its own draw-weight range on the listing dropdown.
Typically riser, limbs, string, stringer, sight, arrow rest, finger tab, quiver, six carbon arrows, target paper, and manual. Confirm the SKU line on Amazon before checkout.
Yes at light poundage with proper sizing and an arm guard added. A youth compound can be easier for the very first hour, but kids who want wood and simplicity learn well on a light Noble setup.
Yes if you want a complete right-hand wooden takedown kit for target training without piecing parts together. Skip it for left-hand fit, hunt-only needs, or buyers prioritizing Samick Sage-level upgrade paths.
I'd buy the Sanlida Noble Standard kit for right-hand youth or adult target beginners who want wood feel and a real accessory bundle at a kit price.
I'd skip it for left-hand shooters, hunt-primary buyers, or anyone who knows they'll want Sage-class ILF swaps within a year. That's my honest read after comparing too many "complete" kits that were bow-only in disguise.