The two piece quiver helped solve part of that problem by holding the arrow at opposite ends which would reduce the amount of noise and vibration in the event that one of my arrows got caught on some brush. The problem I had with my FUSE Posi-Lite two piece quiver was that the pre-cut insert was made for fixed blade broadheads and I was using Rage 2-blade mechanicals. I solved the problem by cutting holes into the quiver to help with the problem, but then I was stuck inserting the arrows back into the quiver the exact same position every time which was not an easy task at last light.
For 2009 Trophy Ridge introduced the Arrow Cage 2 which solved the issue I was having with my old quiver and the Rage broadheads. The Rage heads fit perfectly into the pre-cut holes in the foam of the Arrow Cage 2. The lightweight aluminum construction adds a minimum amount of weight to the bow and the rubber hood acts as a sound dampener, eliminating vibration. The Arrow Cage 2 also comes with three sets of mounting brackets to fit any bow.
The only downside of the Arrow Cage 2 is that the hood is not vertically adjustable. The FUSE Posi-Lite quiver I used to have allowed me to raise the hood so the nocks of my arrows would not pass the bottom limb of my bow. Trophy Ridge's Arrow Cage 2 does have a veritcle adjustment for the hood of the quiver, but on my Mathews Drenalin the quiver fits perfect and my 28.5" arrows do not pass the bottom limb of my bow.
If you're shooting mechanical broadheads, I'd give the Trohpy Ridge Arrow Cage a try, its a great lightweight quiver made for mechanicals. If you're a fixed broadhead person then go with the FUSE Posi-Lite with the precut foam. Either way you'll have a super quite quiver that keeps your arrows close to home for that second shot.
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