I'm down in FL, land of the mouse - over 30 yrs chasing deer with bow & rifle. Used to hunt hogs (don't eat them any more), and do minor amounts of turkey hunting. Meat hunter mainly. FL is going Xbow legal for 2011, Ga already is.
I'm almost legally deaf - wear 2 hearing aids and can not hear when I'm making noise in a tree stand, or on the ground. I have shot 4 deer with a bow - found 2, lost 2 - 3 of the 4 jumped the string... Have missed up to 10 shots in one day due to deer ducking & dodging arrows.

Thinking a crossbow might be a way for me to hunt archery and actually get something instead of just scaring them at close range. Last year I spooked a buck at 10 ft (right under me - we made eye contact as he looked up between my knees!) and a doe at 12 yards as I tried to draw a squeaky compound bow...watched her come about 150 yards down a trail - never knew the bow made noise!

After some research, considering the Phoenix - light, should be easy to string & shoot, and seemingly has enough oomph for deer out to 40-45 yards or so. Have a few ?s about things:
- Is the Phoenix model a good quiet set-up, or should I look to another model for this? (I'm so "trained" that the deer are gonna jump it scares me to think about slinging arrows at them if they are just going to get wounded and run off.)
- Arrows/bolts - 2219 aluminum as good as carbon? Noise and penetration? Durability?
- Fletching - Blazer a good way to go?
- String silencers - the poofy/spider string silencers the best option?
- Broadheads - is it the heavier the better? I've shot spitfires and muzzys with my bow and always got full broadhead penetration, just rarely got arrow penetration - except on hogs at close ranges.
- Jump the string - the videos on here show that the deer do move, but they don't seem to jump the string as bad as I've experienced - what is the consensus on that?
I'd love to shoot a Phoenix but all I know of around here is Bass Pro (won't let you shoot it unless you already bought it) and Gander Mt (doesn't have any Excaliburs in stock).
Thanks for your time. I have only been able to watch some of the videos...don't know how much of this is addressed in them.