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Who's shooting? Tuning? Tinkering?

jagermeister

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Complete outside view is that the problem has been there the entire time. Just overlooked. As the process is slowed down and Stress is looking into it more, he is finding more.

Last year he knew his shit was spot on and flawless. This year he went into this looking for a problem. Guess what he found?
this is my guess too. It was out of whack to begin with. It just wasn’t noticed.
 

Stressless

Active Member
2,128
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Keene, OH
Right handed - sry for the delay, work and a big who-ha coming in tomorrow, my son and his new bride, the couple we had stay with us for both kids weddings, their God Parents and their three boys and all their significant others are all due in in next 36 hours so ... thats occupied me.
20220803_084224.jpg

Giles is right, I shoot, well lol, did... shot fairly decent, 3 shots and 3 pass thru's all right where the pin was. Consistent with the field point and spitfire - which flies closed and doesn't catch nearly the air- needing the steering of a broadhead.
20220803_205040.jpg

But that was prior to dropping the draw weight.

... and not shooting a broadhead.

Even with the lil' blazer fins they stabilized the field point at 20yds to mask the problem.

I can't draw it I increase back to the original setting so no way to baseline it.

I have Neuro Dr appt kinda close to a bow shop. The nearest shop is an hour from the house. Plan to take it in, have them give me an assessment / shoot a 400. The book shows thats the lightest I can go with the current setup - but - As both Jesse and Brock point out the left kick is for left handed not right handed so I'm 🤷??

I bottomed and counted out turns the exact same. If I wasn't heading to the shop tomorrow I'd prolly recheck that as well.

The last variable I IDd was the older strings.. I can't fathom how that would toss such a turd into the configuration but I've seen far worse outcomes in 37 years of systems engineering.

If the broadheads hit close to my field points I wouldn't have put this up but I was perplexed as are some of the big archery brains on here.

I'll add anything of value from taking it in tomorrow. Most likely something simple I've overlooked.
 
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brock ratcliff

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You said you were shooting 350s? I don’t understand how they can be showing weak when shot bareshaft. Whatever is causing the bareshaft to impact the target nock left is the same issue that is causing your broadhead to impact to the right. A fixed blade will drift the direction point is directed. In other words, if your rest is to the right of center, broadheads will impact to the right. More so the longer the shot. If your spine is weak, broadhead will impact right, too stiff it will impact left. So essentially your broadhead impact is showing the same thing as your bareshaft shot. Another thing could be torque. If you have a form problem, you can make arrows do very weird things. My son is one of the finest archers you’d likely ever meet, but a few years ago when shooting through paper I found he had a serious torque built into his shot. It never showed up in his shooting. He drives nails. But if he had been shooting a fixed blade head at the time we would have seen some crazy arrow flight.
Good luck at the shop!
 

Stressless

Active Member
2,128
85
Keene, OH
Yup Brock, the Verado with the weight I used to shoot called for 350's. Got the carbon express Mayhem weight forward 350's at 29.75" been shooting them accurately for years.

Just dropped the weight so I could maybe keep shooting a bow. Not a slow powerless rifle.. aka crossbow. When everything went to shit.

In a word, flummoxed.
 
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Stressless

Active Member
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Keene, OH
Okay - we're all right 😉

@jagermeister spot on. Torquing the limbs with old strings made it really wonky, -outa whack. I hadn't shot it much at distance after Dec '21 just short shots with a magus bullhead for turkey season - but 300 arrows with 5" flech to steer that 6" of sail out front.

Bow pro took 5 secs after I got it out of the case. "You need new strings. Then we'll tune it." Plain, simple straightforward. Also curent draw weight is 59# so missed that guess by 7#. That puts it back into the 350 which is what I had been shooting.

Thx again for the overwatch fellas. I appreciate the knowledge and comments. Should be a couple weeks for the strings. I'll be looking at that walk back method for sure.
 

jagermeister

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Ohio
Honestly… whether you need new string/cables or not, I find it difficult to believe the age and condition of your threads are causing your issues. Plenty of bows shoot great with strings that are ready to let go. But I digress. Get the new strings and see where you’re at.

One thing I noticed from your pic above with the bow square is your rest is likely set too high. I didn’t pay attention to what model bow you are shooting. But generally, the arrow should be passing directly through the center of the Berger hole (that tapped/threaded hole in your riser). Based on your picture, the arrow shaft would be well above the Berger hole. Hopefully the shop technician knows what he or she is doing after getting the new threads and sets the bow up properly for you. Keep us posted!
 

Milo

Tatonka guide.
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Bowshop liars….I will put tuning to you in the simplest form I can… all your doing is putting the center of mass of the arrow in the travel path of the center of mass of the bowstring. Every object rotates around its center of mass and once you can visualize that concept tuning will be so much easier. Your string condition is not even on the equation for getting a bow to shoot…
 

Stressless

Active Member
2,128
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Keene, OH
But generally, the arrow should be passing directly through the center of the Berger hole (that tapped/threaded hole in your riser).
Yup - it is and to make it easier the riser has a furrow parallel to the shelf where the arrow should parrelle, ah-hem... point like a nail, 😂 or arrow or whatever.

I knew I was opening myself up to ridicule by posting the issues I had/found and steps to try and correct them. All knowledge is learned and I think some folks have mistaken me asking how/why as hubris, I appreciate the honest discussion.

The folks throwing rocks openly and off channel - not everyone is a master bowyer. When it went sideways with no clear idea why I asked for and got good advice from many, I applied it and it's still sideways. Most likely it was my poor application of good advice. We'll see.
 
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jagermeister

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Ohio
Yup - it is and to make it easier the riser has a furrow parallel to the shelf where the arrow should parrelle, ah-hem... point like a nail, 😂 or arrow or whatever.

I knew I was opening myself up to ridicule by posting the issues I had/found and steps to try and correct them. All knowledge is learned and I think some folks have mistaken me asking how/why as hubris, I appreciate the honest discussion.

The folks throwing rocks openly and off channel - not everyone is a master bowyer. When it went sideways with no clear idea why I asked for and got good advice from many, I applied it and it's still sideways. Most likely it was my poor application of good advice. We'll see.
I think you’ve misunderstood who those rocks are being thrown at. We aren’t throwing them at you. Our aim is on the bow shop technician who (either ignorantly or predatorily) blamed your bow’s troubles on the existing set of strings and cables. If you search the years of tuning-related threads here on TOO, you’ll notice a trend of shitty “bow shop” service examples, and an obvious, resulting disdain for bow shops in general by our active members. It’s why there are so many of us here that have taken the time to learn the craft ourselves. It’s why people like Milo are so passionate about teaching the mechanics and physics involved in shooting archery. Don’t mistake our humor and negativity toward bow shops as negativity towards you. That’s not the intent at all.
 
With the single cam and an old string the only thing you should see (if the nocking point has indeed moved) is up and down movement to the arrow. Not horizontal movement IF the arrow rest is centered perfectly to the bow/string/arrow. A broadheaded arrow planing left or right compared to a field tip indicates either wrong spine to the arrow and/or the rest is not set up for centershot.

Great to see you Milo!