Acousta Power Recurve Riser Review: Budget Price, Surprising Performance (With One Big Caveat)

Acousta Power Recurve Riser Review: Budget Price, Surprising Performance (With One Big Caveat)

Quick Take

Unboxing → setup → tune → 70-meter test → honest verdict

For about $120, the Acousta Power 25" ILF riser looks the part, sets up easily, aims well, and is shockingly low-vibration on the shot, more “carbon-quiet” than you’d expect from a budget metal riser. It’s light, adjustable, and comes with a padded sleeve.

But there’s a catch: hardware quality, especially the tiller bolt locking mechanism (collet lock). My lower bolt stripped while snugging it not “gorilla tight,” just normal “don’t-move” tight. Draw-weight range is also very limited (uneven top/bottom), and the tiller bolts measure undersized vs. ILF ideal.

If you’re careful with adjustments (use blue threadlocker), this can be a fantastic starter/backup riser that punches way above its price. If you like to tinker often or demand durable hardware, this compromise may frustrate you.

Price & What’s in the Box

  • MSRP I paid: ~$120 (Lancaster; currently out of stock when I checked)

  • In the box: riser, padded sleeve (nice surprise at this price), manual (didn’t list this exact PR model), small swag

  • Finish: powder-coat with visible orange peel; a few small hardware/bushing quirks

First Look & Build Notes

  • Weight: ~1,160 g (~41 oz, ~2.56 lb) → ~100 g lighter than many flagship metal risers. Great for youth/smaller archers or anyone who prefers a lighter handle.

  • Mounts: 3 front bushings, 1 rear, dual plunger holes, sight holes, clicker plate.

  • Grip: soft-touch stock grip = comfy if you “hold the bow,” but lacks support where a performance grip should. Swapped to an Arcore “I AM” grip (fit fine) for better hand contact and stability.

  • Serial number: I couldn’t find one anywhere on the riser. That’s a concern for traceability/warranty.

  • Finish/Hardware QC:

    • Powder coat shows orange peel.

    • A couple hex heads looked partially rounded from the factory.

    • One rear bushing sat slightly skewed (limits some weights unless you use spacers).

ILF Interface & Tiller Bolts (Read This)

  • Tiller bolt diameters on my sample: ~0.369–0.370" (undersized vs. the ~0.373–0.375" “happy zone”).

    • Upside: most limbs will “fit” easily.

    • Downside: looser limb-to-bolt interface than ideal.

  • Draw-weight range (turns out from contact):

    • Top: ~2.5–2.75 turns (very limited)

    • Bottom: ~4–4.5 turns (oddly more than top)

    • This asymmetry limits total usable range; standard ILF often allows ~6 turns.

  • Locking mechanism: collet-style lock. The internal threads stripped on my lower bolt during a routine snug. The head/hex didn’t round—the threads spun.

    • Result: I can “mostly” lock it, but it’s compromised.

    • Strong recommendation: apply blue (not red) threadlocker to the tiny grub/lock screws on day one; avoid adjusting while strung; tighten gently.

Setup, Tuning, and Range Time

Build: Limbs bolted on and aligned quickly; all accessories mounted without drama. Despite the budget price, the alignment system worked cleanly.

30 m tune:

  • Felt extremely dead in the hand, almost no residual hum.

  • With my older flagship limbs, the bow shot quiet and “neutral.”

  • Needed stiffer arrows than expected (ended up at 410s).

  • Bear-shaft showed I was in the ballpark; a tiny nocking-point tweak would polish it.

70 m session:

  • Aims steady; jumps straight (not hyper-snappy, but ok).

  • Groups were competitive when I did my job; the platform isn’t the limiter.

  • Limbs (not the riser) contributed some perceived shaking, note on me, not the handle.

What I Loved

  • Insane value at $120; looks like a “real” ILF riser, because it is.

  • Very low vibration, shockingly dead in hand post-shot.

  • Lightweight build is friendly for newer/smaller archers or long sessions.

  • Alignment & setup were straightforward.

  • Comes with a padded sleeve (rare at this price).

What Missed the Mark

  • Tiller bolt system:

    • Undersized diameters; limited turns (especially top).

    • Collet lock stripped under normal snugging, big knock on durability.

  • Hardware/finish QC: visible orange peel, a few iffy hex heads, skewed rear bushing.

  • No serial number that I could find.

  • Stock grip lacks performance shaping (aftermarket grip recommended).

Who Should Consider It

  • New archers (recurve/barebow) and budget-minded shooters who want a true ILF platform without breaking the bank.

  • Younger/smaller athletes who benefit from the lighter handle.

  • Tinkerers on a budget, as long as you’re gentle with hardware and don’t plan frequent, aggressive adjustments.

Maybe pass if you:

  • Frequently change tiller/draw weight.

  • Want a long-term “heirloom” riser with immaculate finishing.

  • Need wide draw-weight adjustability.

Setup Tips (Do This)

  • Add blue threadlocker to grub/lock screws and accessory screws.

  • Avoid adjusting while strung; make small, even changes top/bottom.

  • Consider an aftermarket grip (Rrcore “I AM” worked great for me).

  • If you run a rear weight, test clearance; use spacers if the bushing angle interferes.

  • Expect to tune with a slightly stiffer shaft than you think.

Bottom Line

The Acousta Power riser shoots far better than it costs: stable aim, straight jump, and a remarkably quiet, dead feel in the hand. For a first ILF or a budget backup, it’s genuinely fun and very capable.

But the tiller bolt/locking situation is the Achilles’ heel. If Acousta upgrades that hardware (and tightens QC on bushings/finish), this would be a category killer. As it stands, it’s a great value, just treat the hardware with care, set it, and don’t crank on it.

Regresar al blog

Deja un comentario

Ten en cuenta que los comentarios deben aprobarse antes de que se publiquen.