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Timberline Marksman Hunting Rifle Crossbow - Hardwood Stock

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72.50


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Timberline Field Precision Rifle Crossbow - Hardwood Stock

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This rifle-style 150 lb crossbow is built for shooters who take their field time seriously. With a solid hardwood stock, durable fiber limbs, and a full foot stirrup, it cocks like real equipment and settles into the shoulder with rifle-like stability. Adjustable sights let you dial in point of impact, while the included 15" aluminum bolts give you everything you need to start shooting. For hunting or disciplined target work, this is a classic, no-nonsense crossbow that feels like a real tool in the hands.

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Timberline Field Precision Rifle Crossbow - Hardwood Stock

The 150 lb Timberline Field Precision Rifle Crossbow is built for the shooter who treats their gear like tools, not toys. Real hardwood stock, 150 pounds of draw weight, solid recurve limbs, and rifle-style ergonomics put this squarely in the serious sportsman category. If you want a traditional hunting crossbow that shoulders like a rifle and hits with authority, this is the layout that’s earned its place in the field.

Rifle-Style Crossbow Control for Serious Field Shooting

Calling this a “rifle crossbow” isn’t marketing fluff—it describes the way it actually handles. The hardwood stock gives you a full shoulder mount, cheek weld, and foregrip just like a classic hunting rifle. That means steadier offhand shots, better control on the trigger, and the kind of instinctive pointing you don’t get from minimalist pistol-grip rigs.

The 150 lb draw weight sits in the sweet spot for a hunting and target crossbow: enough power to drive a proper bolt with authority, without jumping into the ultra-heavy draw weights that demand a winch every time you cock it. Paired with solid recurve limbs, you get predictable limb behavior and simple, durable mechanics that are easy to maintain and understand.

Why 150 lb Recurve Limbs Matter

On this crossbow, the solid recurve limbs are doing the real work. No cams, no eccentric systems—just fiber limbs loading energy along a clean curve. The benefit is mechanical simplicity and field reliability: fewer moving parts, less to go out of tune, and a very consistent power stroke shot to shot. For the hunter or target shooter who values repeatability, that kind of limb behavior is worth more than flashy geometry.

Crossbow for Sale with Real-World Features that Count

This isn’t a wall-hanger. It’s a crossbow for sale built to be cocked, carried, and shot hard.

  • Hardwood stock: Full-length rifle-style stock for stability, control, and a natural shoulder mount.
  • 150 lb draw weight: Heavy-duty power appropriate for hunting and serious target work.
  • Durable fiber limbs: Solid recurve construction tuned for repeatable performance.
  • Adjustable sights: Dial-in elevation and windage so the bow matches your bolts and distance.
  • Foot stirrup: Large front stirrup for efficient, safe cocking using body weight.
  • Manual safety: Positive safety control near the trigger so you can verify status at a glance.
  • Includes bolts: Two 15" metal-tipped aluminum arrows so you can start shooting immediately.

Included 15" Aluminum Bolts

The two included 15-inch aluminum bolts aren’t an afterthought. Aluminum shafts take abuse better than cheap plastic, and the metal tips are ready for real target work. At 150 lb draw, this crossbow wants a bolt with some spine and durability—exactly what you get here. As you tune your setup, you’ll know what baseline performance looks like before you start experimenting with different heads or shaft weights.

Action, Control, and Shot Experience

What separates a usable hunting crossbow from a frustrating one is the way it cocks, locks, and launches. The Timberline’s sequence is straightforward: foot in the stirrup, both hands on the string, draw smoothly until the string seats and the mechanism captures it. The manual safety provides a clear tactile and visual cue, and the trigger breaks from a rifle-like shooting position instead of a cramped, awkward hold.

That rifle-style stock isn’t cosmetic—it distributes recoil, stabilizes the shot, and lets your support hand control the fore-end the way it would on a long gun. On target, that translates into steadier sights and more consistent grouping, especially from field positions and makeshift rests.

Adjustable Sights for Real Tuning

The adjustable sight system isn’t there to look tactical; it’s there so you can actually zero this crossbow to your chosen bolt and distance. Once you’ve chrono’d or at least understood your trajectory, you can set a practical zero—say 25 or 30 yards for hunting—and know exactly where that bolt is going in your effective range. That’s the difference between guessing and shooting with intent.

What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife

Are automatic knives legal?

Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives (often called switchblades in the legal code) are regulated mainly in terms of interstate commerce and shipment, but they’re not outright banned nationwide. The real complexity is at the state and sometimes local level. Some states allow automatic knives for general carry, others limit them to law enforcement or specific professions, and some restrict blade length or how and where they can be carried. Before you buy an automatic knife or a switchblade online, you need to check your state and municipal laws, including any concealed carry provisions. Dealers who know this category will be clear about shipping limitations and will remind you that it’s your responsibility to know what’s legal to own and carry where you live.

What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?

Mechanically, an automatic knife is any knife where a spring-driven blade deploys from the closed position when you hit a button, lever, or similar control. A switchblade is essentially the same thing in the language of the law—most statutes use “switchblade” as the catch-all term for automatic opening knives.

An OTF knife (out-the-front) is a specific type of automatic where the blade travels linearly out of the front of the handle instead of pivoting out of the side. Many OTF knives are double-action automatics, meaning the same control both deploys and retracts the blade under spring tension; others are single-action and require manual retraction. Side-opening automatics still use a pivot like a traditional folder, but the spring takes over as soon as the lock releases. Enthusiasts use all three terms, but “automatic” describes the mechanism, “OTF” describes the blade path, and “switchblade” is mostly the legal and cultural label.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

A serious automatic knife earns its place in your rotation by the way its action behaves and how the steel performs. On a proper automatic, the lockup should be secure, the spring should drive the blade out with authority but not violence, and the button or slide should feel positive—not mushy, not gritty. Collectors look for consistent deployment, minimal blade play, and a mechanism that feels engineered rather than rushed.

Steel matters just as much. Whether you’re talking mid-range stainless or high-end powder metallurgy, what counts is a heat treat that matches the intended use: edge stability, corrosion resistance, and toughness in balance. When you buy an automatic knife from a competent dealer, you’re buying that combination of tuned action and appropriate steel, not just a blade that happens to open fast.

Why This Rifle Crossbow Belongs in a Serious Shooter’s Rack

While the legal and mechanical nuances of every automatic knife for sale can fill volumes, the common thread with this rifle crossbow is the same: equipment that respects the user. The Timberline Field Precision Rifle Crossbow doesn’t hide behind gimmicks. It gives you a 150 lb recurve powerplant, a true hardwood stock, a proper foot stirrup, and sights you can actually adjust. It’s the archery equivalent of a well-made field rifle—simple, dependable, and built to be used.

If your standards for gear are higher than “good enough,” this crossbow fits right in. It’s for the shooter who wants power they can control, ergonomics that make sense, and a traditional hunting profile that won’t go out of style next season.

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