been into hunting with rifle and bow since 1983. never cared for the attitude of the professionals behind the counter of the sport shops. quickly taught myself and its been satisfying and a great hobby.
Recent experience with a "pro shop" bares this out. I had an arrow break on release and string/cables went off the rails. New string/cables and bent cam replaced - quoted $300 3 weeks. Came in $494 and 8 weeks. Draw length set at 29", draw stop set at 25". Ugh. I will do my own work from now on.
Thank You!!! As a nearly 20 year veteran archery tech, I really appreciate you helping dispel these myths and flat out mistakes!!! Especially in a time where there are so many on TH-cam just piling on the false BS or info with out giving the true groundwork as to why!!! Great job!!!
I don’t think he explains “why” about anything, he just explains what a bow shop will do. they will move you rest out of line with your cams to get it to shoot a bullet hole. shodden they be making the bow square meaning the cams are straight to the riser and the rest supporting the arrow directly behind the string. I understand that the manufacturer tell the bow shop to move the rest 13/16ths from the riser but won’t that make the arrow canted left or do you need to add cam lean to straighten the arrow as it’s siting on the rest as we’ll.
The "lean" is already there. Between the fraction of an angle that the cams are on and the natural way a bow is drawn, it flys much straighter when aimed at that slight angle. It you line it up, like I use to, your forcing the arrow out at a bad trajectory causing the arrow to wobble in flight. I couldn't keep on target for the life of me before literally watching this video and running outside to adjust my bow. Now I'm slamming shot after shot on my previous arrow without adjusting anything else other than than realigning my sight. This actually works, I'm impressed.
I agree 100% with you, my opinion is a lot of this gets started to help “bow shops” put money in their pockets. It’s kinda like a mechanic who knows that the person they are dealing with really doesn’t understand mechanics. I feel so many “bow shops” today take a guy or gal money and never really teach them about their equipment or archery itself. Sad really, archery is such a fun and peaceful thing to do. Thanks for keeping it real.
To play devils advocate, they gotta make money somehow. It’s already a hard business to make a lot in, especially with online sales. If everyone knew how to work on their bows, the shops would be outta business.
@@thetowndrunk988 what's your point? If everyone knew how to swap a head, we wouldn't have car repair shops either. People either have the aptitude for mechanical and technical stuff or they don't. Trust me, way more people don't. Shops aren't going anywhere. Cars or bows. Now, cars and bows both may be a thing of the past one day, but that's a different conversation all together.
@@pre_ban_andy but a car dealer makes a crap ton more money to begin with. That’s the whole point. A bow shop, especially one that doesn’t also sell guns, is operating off of peanuts, so I say give em all the business you can afford to, even if you know what you’re doing. Maybe it’s just the nostalgia of an old man like me, but I still enjoy walking into an actual shop to buy stuff, rather than using that rainforest website.
When we have days when we are selling 40 bows a day we dont allow customers in the shop its dangerous and not enough room most all bows we will put in time and everything we're it should be and tell them if they have troubles you can spend 4 hrs with one 1 customer and cand get a bullet hole I can but they have a lot to learn about form and I cant teach that in a hour we would never get anything done we have 3 people that have placed top 3 in the world championships, and one that has won 3 times so we know how to set bows up , and they send us too school at Mathews and hoyt every year if we need it or not . Most stock strings and cables are junk almost all of us change them over too quality strings first thing , most customers are not willing to do that . And I dont blame them it's hard to spend another $150 after buying a bow especially after buying a complete set up . I had a customer bring his bow in and said he cant shoot it , I pulled it back and immediately noticed know layoff and could feel the bottom cam hitting way to soon I moved the draw stop back one spot to see how bad it immediately was a different bow it that let off and the poundage seemed lower . I put it in time the best I could because they were way over twisted I finally talked him in to ordering a new quality set of string and cables. His bow has never been back too the shop . I have been out of it for awhile because of health issues there used to be bows that came with winners choice today there are probably better strings that come on bows .
One thing I start with AFTER setting the rest at manufacturers spec position is screwing in a long target stabilizer. Then with an arrow mounted on the string and in the rest I look from behind the bow and see if the arrow sitting on the string lines up with the stabilizer. Manufacturers will not machine a stabilizer mounting bushing that is not perfectly 90 degrees to the axis of the bow. I have used this system for 10-15 years and it’s so close to zero I very seldom have had to move the rest. I get bullet holes in paper 99% of the time on the first shot.
Like your incite you bring to your channel. I've watched several of your review videos of bows, as I'm just getting into the sport. I've been doing a lot of research and reading about everything I can, trying to eliminate getting into bad habits from the start. A video like this is a great help in that direction. A big concern I have is learning who to listen to because there is so much information and opinions out there and I'm just learning the sport and all the terminology that goes along with it. Thanks
Good info! But I wish I would have shimmed earlier. After 1 year of trying really everything with my Ventum 33 and not getting it really 100% tuned, I finally shimmed the top cam to the right just a bit and voila, fixed blade, field point, bare shaft in one group at 40 yards. Me: happy
Congratulations on presenting one of the best Channels on this subject. Your enthusiasm is infectious. For what it's worth, when I first got into compound bows, as a 'rookie', I also expected full alignment meant 'full accuracy'.... until I learnt about what I now call "IBT". Quite a few years on, as a retired Engineer, with a keen interest in compound bow design/performance, I have been perplexed at the seemingly endless focus on peripheral issues, that can actually or might effect accuracy, but the single, by far most important fundamental factor, is rarely addressed. That factor is bow torque that is innate or integral to the specific bow design; hereinafter refered to as "Integral Bow Torque" or "IBT". Suffice to say, archers are well aware of the importance of proper technique in gripping, or should I say, supporting, the bow, so as to avoid torquing the riser and avoiding nock face pressure etc, but, ironically, IBT is regularly never mentioned at all, in bow reviews and bow selection in general. Archers and hunters who are not Engineers have sought to argue that IBT is not a problem, because it generates the same, consistant bow structure response, during each draw/ release cycle. This is profoundly misguided, frankly wrong, reasoning. The ability of any projectile based weapon to consistantly send the projectile to the point of aim, across all range distances, requires that the stucture supporting the energised projectile, supports, but does not impose lateral or vertical forces on the projectile throughout the projectiles path out of the supporting structure. In the case of compound bows, the key points of support for the projectile/arrow are the rest and nock point. It is therefore obvious, that maximum consistant accuracy can only occur when nock travel has neutral lateral and neutral vertical movement after release from full draw. Just as important is that the arrow rest does not exhibit lateral (horizontal plane) rotation, that can cause lateral forces on the arrow shaft. There is no avoiding these realities other than by seeking to deny them. It is of course possible to adjust nock height, rest position and, most significantly, lateral sight pin settings, to consistantly compensate for IBT at a specific range distance. However, because IBT causes the arrows lateral trajectory to gently curve away from the line of aim, lateral pin adjustment must be customised for a specifuc range distance! Thus, I can get any number of bows to group tightly, group after group, at say 20 yards. However, the IBT will always introduce innate, incrementally greater inaccuracy at any longer distances. Unfortunately, many archers/ hunters, failing to take IBT into account, spend many, many wasted hours on peripheral factors. Bow manufactures are aware of the importance of IBT but seek to ignore it. The only manufacturer I have observed openly, but briefly, acknowledging its importance was G5 Prime. So, to all my fellow compound bow enthusiasts, before you possibly spend more money and time on speculating over peripheral stuff, may I suggest you sweat on IBT and let bow manufacturers know you're expecting future models to have zero IBT and zero vertical nock travel after release from full draw.
Some really good info here, thank you. So many people don't give a second thought to a bow being set up to a manufacturer's spec as the design engineers intended. It was tested to those specs, it only makes sense. On a diferent note, I love the buss cables on my Bowtechs, tuning is a breeze.
Awesome explanation. I've been shooting, tuning and hunting with bows probably since before you were born...learned several things here. Never even heard the term "berger button" before.
Thanks for you good points of view. I found you are the first on TH-cam who verry straight of bow tuning priorities👍I started my archery with a PSE Stinger Max two years ago and now switched to a PSE Evo Evl 32 ( Verry nice bow) and first i shot my bow after installation of nokepoint, rest and scoop. I needed a short time for the adjustment of peep and drawlenght but a lot of days for the adjustment of the rest and scoop. Walk back and french tuning and finding of centershot. Now i got a bow which perfect adjusted to me. At least i tried a paper tuning just for fun and found a nice image with my homemade finished arrows (Carbon Hunter) I will say every archer have to investigate a little time to get a bow thats perfect to shoting for him. I am refering you have to shot your bow to gain experiance and a good adjustment for your own shoting 😉At least really, sorry for my englisch it is not my native language and so long from good old Germany 👋
Great video as always! The nocking point being in the center of the string only works for bows like recent model Mathews and PSE's with symmetrical cams, adequate clearance off the shelf AND all of the other factors you mentioned being accounted for correctly. That point also tends to be 90 degrees from the Berger button hole on those models so same, same. I know I'm not the only one to come to that conclusion but I have definitely recommended it as a starting point so sorry for the questions ;)
Spot on ! I bought an elite envision got crazy noise and it’s not a bolt on accessory but I’ll figure it out. Shoots awesome! The basics are 90 percent of any aquired skill yet people focus on the 10 percent that creates minor improvement.
Thank you, I had my rest set up completely wrong. Set it to 13/16 off of the riser and now with just a tiny sight adjustment, I'm banging off my own arrows almost every shot at 15 yards. Can finely start moving my target back 😊
Nate, thanks for what you stress in Myth 5... So much "online cruft" goes straight to shimming (or other harsh tuning like yoke, etc). I totally agree with the grip being a huge issue (as you and I have discussed in my journey) but I would add to grip is anchor point. I recently discovered (and had run into this early in my bow learnings) that I was actually torquing the string on my face and also torquing the release. Both produce similar things as grip issues. Was maddening to figure out, especially the torquing the release.
Agreed on face to string pressure. I use a handheld button release that has a long neck. I felt my anchor point was too far back causing string torquing. I just purchased a B3 Exit with a short neck and what a diff it made in my groupings and overall anchor point.
I love the presentation. You are a professional archer that THINK instead of Parroting others. I agree with all the your arrow dynamic and trajectory analysis which I as a Bear Bow shooter applied to my Bow especially the arrow rest shape, functionality and position on the bow shelf. Thanks
Wow take a breath lol Very good info ! You pack a lot of info into a none stop , no wasted pause or thinking it just flows out! Glad I watched , I’ll subscribe, cause I think you have a lot to offer !
I am very new to archery and have shot about 50 arrows or so in my life. I just got my first (second hand) bow a few days ago and noticed that, after installing my stabilizer, my arrow was pointing way off to the left. I got OBSESSED at trying to fix this problem and haven't even properly shot the bow because of it. Im SO happy to hear you say this as I can now let it go and just get to tuning my bow properly through paper tuning and not just eyesight. Thank you for giving my brain a break haha. I still think its strange as it seems that my bowstring is too far off to the right, making my arrows having to rest crazy close to the edge of the bow. It seems like somehow my string is offset to the right. I also noticed that my cable slide is rather far away from the string and when putting the cables into the slide, it makes my arrow point even further to the left. Weird...
I had issues with the drop away rest on my bow. The little clamp slid on the down cable. One of these days I will just serve it in, but I'm getting pretty close to new string time so it works for now. Good video. I always focus on form before tuning with my 4H archery and JOAD kids. I've never even thought about tuning on the Genesis bows we use for NASP.
Do like half a inch of a technique called Half Hitching the string above the cable clamp. Let the clamp slide snug to the half hitch you made problem solved
You have a new sub. I went shooting with a buddy and he noticed my arrows were flying ass high but hitting center started doing research because I'm very new to this and he's very new to shooting a bow as well and trying to find a solution has been difficult.
On my Mathews, if you run the arrow straight through the Berger and 90 deg off the string, the nocking point ends up being dead center of the string. Great info.
Just shot my first practice round...man am I hooked. Such a great way to spend time. I've watched a bunch of your videos the past few days. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and passion of archery. God Bless
Thank you for this video. Totally agree. I even shoot a Hind-sight to eliminate torque. I've gotten used to it and can tweak it if needed. My brother says I shoot my bow too much, but I'm learning how my bow handles. I notice a slight pull left in colder weather from warm Temps, so I can slightly adjust to fix torque as hunting season progresses.
Would like to learn the ins/outs of arrow lingo - arrow spine, weights, diameters; i know this, but when listening to experienced folks chat about different arrows and they "throw" around the lingo, it can get confusing. Also, it seems each arrow manufacturer use different lingo to describe their arrows (ie. 340's vs 25's), etc. This video segment is a great idea, TIA!
Hahah how dare you bring up the grip "these bows are hard to tune, I used this grip on the other brand for 5 years with no issues, now on this new brand I have all kinds of issues. Let's not even start with my trigger hammering issue 🤣" on a side note the newer prime shims are very simple, more like the top hats than tiny shims. Great content 👍 keep up the great work
Hey good day hope all is well. I’ve had this windage problem since the beginning. The pro shop set up my bow apparently I’m a newbie so I don’t know. My windage is all the way to the left. I’m hitting middle like that, I think that’s not right so I would like to know how to get to you so you can fix it for me I have a bear adapt plus. I’m coming from Staten Island NY. Thanks in advance. 🙏🏽
Hoyt’s Binary Cam system is very simple to tune. I have a Ventum 33 and my bow tech simply swapped the small spacers on each side. Took a bow press, a small Hoyt “spacer” wrench and less than 4 minutes time. Shooting bullet holes. Can’t get much easier than that.
I have the VXR 2020 as when it was made I think right it on one side I think it's like an inch in a quarter on the other side it's not even an inch from the limb from the limb to the inside of the camp so it's definitely not in the center
As far as point number 4 (the nocking point location) some bows like the Mathews trx series do shoot the best with the nock point dead center between the axles
I think this is the first time i agree with you Nate. Both the power house and projectiles are equally important. To look only at the bow or the arrow is missing the other half of the equation.
Great video nat. Need to Cole check out the shop one if these days. I travel from Tyrone clear to weavers for a bow shop. There is a few closet but I've gotten to know and trust them guys down there.
My shop used a framing square lol if it works it works but my fletching keeps hitting my rest and. I have a trophy ridge quick shot or whatever and it doesn't adjust up and down. It's frustrating right now lol had to take a break from shooting
Bow tech here. Completely agree with the comments about the Mathews tophats being easier than shims but we still very regularly change out shims on other bows to fix tuning and leave that centershot within +- 1/16” of that ideal 13/16”. I guess it’s something I’ve done for a while now but how important do you think that 13/16” is? (Before we change em we obviously shoot it ourselves through paper and often verify with another tech to make sure the tears match) Slightly related to this, what do you personally do when you shoot perfect, consistent bullet holes through paper and have the customer verify it’s tuned to them and it’s WAY off? Often times, with 30+ minutes of coaching, I cannot get the customer to shoot without torquing. If it’s a super consistent bad year for them I usually will end up breaking out the shins but often times just tell them to watch some videos, practice, and we can retune later when they’re more comfortable. If they’re hunting like that we tell them that a small diameter mechanical is the way to go 100% too. Thanks for taking the time to read this!
I worked in a sporting goods store as the bow tech for 7 years and all the little tricks for tuning and how easy it is to get a bow out of tune and/or keeping a compund bow perfectly in tune drove me to stick to my longbow for all my target shooting and hunting. Without a bow press in my house it literally drove me nuts keeping my bow intune shooting its best. Strings and bow systems are better now but just tuning it once and trusting it will be the same 6 months from the tune is unrealistic. Temperature change, string stretch, any small adjustments, heck just shooting it is enought to make your bow change.
I learned the hard way the part about getting to know my bow before worrying about most other stuff. My PSE Supra RTX, 40ATA and SE cam, for example, doesn't like arrows that weigh under 320 grains. Even though the commonly held wisdom states that any arrow over the total weight of 5 grains per pound of draw weight would mean any arrow just over 280 grains would do. The bow would make a terrible snapping sound when I released the string.
Shimming a PSE usually meant going into a worse position in my cases. Top or bottom cam would already have lean, and I'd end up giving the limb more leverage that didn't need it, and I can't just buy stiffer limbs within deflection tolerance online.
Thanks Nate for all the great info you provide. I just built a full bow shop and plan on opening to the public in a few years when I get a good base of knowledge. I am definitely not confident enough now to start working on others equipment. I have an Elite Remedy I shoot for 3D and indoor. I am about to replace the string and cables. Can you give me the order of set up steps you use to tune a target bow? I would greatly appreciate your advice. Thanks again
Hahahaa...I got 2 Bowtech Destroyer 350s from 2010 that I've got the arrow lined up perfectly with the stabilizer and shooting bulletholes. As well, I also have a Diamond Infinite Edge Pro that I've tuned the same way. I do have a 2022 Bowtech Solution SS with binary cams that the arrow sits pointed slightly out to the left of my stabilizer, but I'm okay with that, because there's no way to change the cam to lean perfectly to get perfect centershot alignment with the stabilizer. So, yeah, it depends on the design of the bow/cam system whether or not you can get perfect centershot on the arrow to the stabilizer.
I wish I would have watched your video last night before I untuned my bow. I tried aligning my arrow square with my bow and after two arrows, I realized fletchings were hitting the strings. So now back to square one of putting it back the way it was. 😖
I've never considered lining up an arrow with my stabilizer, but when setting up my bow I do make sure my arrow lines up with my string while making sure my level is level.
I bought the Axcel Hunting Slider Sight ArmorTech Lite Fixed Mount 41mm Scope, and when shooting my Bowtech SS34 in the store I already mentioned that I couldn't fully see it in the 5/32 peepsight! So I bought the wrong scope it should have been a 31mm scope I think! what should i do now?
Just getting into bows about 2 months ago, so long story 🤣 my wife and her dad got together and decided to buy me a bow so I can learn and hunt with it, they bought me the Bear cruzer g2 and had the DL maxed as im 6 foot 5 inch and found out after they got it that my DL is 31 and a half 🤦♂️😂 so, Bear cruzer g2 maxed at 29 😔 I learned to use it anyway as it was what I had and with being disabled and the 2 of us having 10 kids, 5 hers and 5 mine that we have full custody of, buying another bow wasn't really an option especially given the bow price for us big guys 😡 I couldn't control the bow properly and couldn't get my arrows in a 2 inch at 20 yards, my wife decided she would fix this problem, did her research and bought me the PSE Freak SP and it worked beautifully wow what a difference it made in comfort, shot placement, but most of all, it boosted my confidence in hunting so, got my bear and deer tags for both archery and rifle and wouldn't ya know it, 3 days before I head out for bear archery one of my children decided they would dry fire dads new bow and hide it back in its case 😭🤦♂️🙊 needless to say, I had to take the Bear cruzer g2 😱 well, I was successful, I got my bear, my very first animal to start my hunting story with many more to come in the future hopefully, yes I started late in life learning to hunt as I didn't have anyone to take me and teach me but want to learn and take my children... So, now that I've said all that 😂🤣😂 the PSE freak sp needed new cams, it takes almost 2 weeks for anyone to get them, they are on their way for the bow shop that's doing my repairs for me this one time as I like to learn to do my own work on anything I own and I am learning bows now, question is, do the cams need to always be what came on that bow? Or can you have a bow set up and chose to go with cams from a different manufacturer? 🤔 by next year I will have extra parts for every bit of this bow for backups just incase, I just thought that if I could pick cams that are easily available to pick up anywhere and fit my bow and comfort level then it would be smarter to make that change instead of waiting 2 weeks directly from the manufacturer 🤦♂️🤷♂️🙈😁 is there anything else I should know about this particular bow? Maybe give me some idea of things to keep an eye on? Upgrades? Experience? Thank you for all the information you shared, things I've learned so far from you and others on this platform I will pass on to my children and grandchildren and feel like I can be confident in doing so as I know this knowledge is indeed good and learned through experience as well... Thank you soo much
Also, now that the Bear cruzer g2 is broke in and got its first animal, it is currently being passed down already to one of my sons as his first bow and just like me, he is picking it up very quickly but, ill wait until next year before I let him actually hunt with it as I should have done the same, learned some things while hunting but, next year will be even better as I grow more and more
My Hoyt manual says to get center shot starting point between 1 inch to 5/8ths inches from (Ham)Berger Button. 😁 I got my bow tuned within a few shots. I didn’t even need to fine tune for field points and broadheads. Groups are almost robinhood precise. 🏹🎯 I like a short D-Loop too some people have long d-loop 🤷🏼♂️
Pertinent, maybe. I just bought a Blackout Distinct - $529 , from Bass Pro - 2023. I cannot get rid of right tear, paper tuning. I find the tiller is out by 7/16 - nearly 1/2" My query is whether modern, past parallel bows, are ok with unequal tiller Or should I start turning limb bolts?
I've got a bow w a tail high tear, would dropping the d loop a bit help w this situation. Guy is wanting to use a whisker biscuit 63 lbs 29.5 in arrows, 300 spine. 175 total weight up front. ....
Wow, what a great video!!! Question: what's a good scale for measuring draw weight? I am rehabbing my shoulder so I would like to measure it. I backed my "non-speed" bow off a full turn and I have progressed to where I may be ready to increase my draw weight a bit. Thanks.
Hello I'm new to archery. My goal is to practice until and prepare myself for our next dear season. I live in Crestline , ca. I e been doing some practicing . I've got a martin lynx & a high country extreme .like I said I'm new to archery .so any help would be greatly appreciated . Want to restring the one I choose. Any suggestions on where to restring & or tune? I'm on a budget but want to make my bow accurate.. hope to hear from you soon . Bill I
Thank you so much, I spent so long trying to paper tune my bow with no success. However, I was grouping incredibly well at 20, 30, 40, 50 and 60 yards. Gave up and just concentrated on technique.
so 13/16 is a good starting point, how far in or out are you comfortable moving the rest before you consider shimming (all other factors accounted for first obviously). my PSE NTN 33 shoots light arrows dead nut bullet holes at 13/16 but my heavier set up (still only 475gr) shoots bullets at 3/4. (and to make sure it wasnt a spine issue, I beefed up the point weight on my 340 spine light arrows and it was really a tuning nightmare, 300s only necessitated that small adjustment to the rest to 3/4)
@@averagejackarchery so 13/16 horizontaly. How about vertical… should we align the middle of the arrow with the middle of the holes ? First time building my bow :)
Then again, more bows like Mathews are designed to be shimmed instead of yoke tuned. So know the equipment rather. Would you say the SET whatever thing on your elite is the 10th thing to touch if the rest is at centershot and you have a tear?
What would make my string way off as far as center shot , when I try to do 13/16 it's way off like front is 13/16 and the far side of the arrow will be like 1" or more...what happend?.
How far down the list is yolk tuning? I tried everything to correct a knock right tear on my Torrex to no avail, I'm ready to start twisting some yolks. Also, there is wear on my string stop were the string is hitting it to the right of center which explains alot. Thanks
I just dry fired my new bow. Was trying out a handheld release for the first time. So focused on form and technique that I forgot to nock a dang arrow. Doh!
@@dant4786 Chances are there's no damage. Put the string back on off it jumped and keep going. I see it happen a lot. Heck I've done it, I've blow knocks apart on accident and just restrung the bow and kept going. Its certainly not ideal but I feel like there is also a lot of hysteria around this sort of incident.
@@NoMatureContent Good to know. It definitely blew apart a yoke so I need to get that replaced before I can do anything. Which is part of why I want to get it looked at.
@@dant4786 Jeez thats unfortunate. definitely get that replaced, obviously. But besides that if there's no physical damage to the cam's you'll be pretty right to go. I've even had strings roll the edge on cams and after I file it back its been fine. Certainly not advocating this sort of thing but mistakes do happen and they don't need to be terminal. I just imagine how many times prehistoric people had this issue and just had to soldier on in spite of it. Especially with primitive technology.
Should your string , arrow and sight pin be inline? My sight pin is to the left of my string when I line up string and arrow. I'm getting bullet hole through paper and when I went to sight in my pin ended up to the left and really could go another click or 2.
Hi A.J.A . I'm a little confused , after 45 years of tuning bows , I was always under the impression that as the string stretches, and gets longer ,the poundage goes up. You stated that when your A.T.A was over spec, by just a 1/16" (I'm assuming because of the string stretching) you lost 2-3 lbs. of draw weight. I don't understand that, please explain. Thanks.
If the strings and cables stretch, then the limbs aren't as under much load to start. Therefore they cannot peak as high in their load through the draw cycle. Hope that helps!
Sorry, Not really. Once, "Back in The Day" a friend had a "problem" with his bow, (1990 Ben Person "Flame" ?) after he brought it to a "Bow-Shop" when his string broke, and they didn't know what the factory string length was, (or didn't care, or didn't have one, etc) so long story short, when I finally checked his bow out, what was once set at 75 lbs. was now at 90 lbs. !! (draw length increased tremendously, too) because they wound up putting a string on that was 2" too long ! So as I have done in the past, to check, measure your poundage, take the string off, and put one on, just one inch longer, without touching anything else, and then measure the poundage again. Were just talking about string length, not timing cable length. When timing cables stretch, poundage goes down. I only twist the timing cables to bring the poundage back to spec. When the string stretches, the poundage goes up, and I only twist the string to bring the draw length back into spec. after the timing cable adjustment for poundage.Thanks, Love your channel, one of the best, I always recommend it, to everyone.@@averagejackarchery
Prime says 7/8 from the shelf and berger hole plus or minus 1/8 but I agree I tune my bow where it shoots best and I find my bad shots are still good accurate shots the bow is just very forgiving
Great video, too bad I have no clue what you're talking about, total noob here. But, you got a subscriber for sure. Going to check your channel for any possible beginner videos. I'm about 50 or so shots in on a Diamond Edge 320, didn't want to drop a ton of money on my first compound bow.
Bow gets the arrow downrange, and a car gets the driver downrange. A better analogy might be the mechanic never checks out the driver to make sure he knows how to operate the car before diagnosing the reported car issues.
If you trust that the riser is machined that exact, and I mean every one of those risers, then you do you. I have a laser light that attaches where your sight goes. You simple nock an arrow, align the laser first to make sure it’s dead center on the string, then move that laser abs see if it will follow the middle of that shaft all the way to the point. If it does not, then you adjust the rest until it does. I dont even trust that plunger hole to be where level is either. But hey, you do you.
been into hunting with rifle and bow since 1983. never cared for the attitude of the professionals behind the counter of the sport shops. quickly taught myself and its been satisfying and a great hobby.
Recent experience with a "pro shop" bares this out. I had an arrow break on release and string/cables went off the rails. New string/cables and bent cam replaced - quoted $300 3 weeks. Came in $494 and 8 weeks. Draw length set at 29", draw stop set at 25". Ugh. I will do my own work from now on.
Thank You!!! As a nearly 20 year veteran archery tech, I really appreciate you helping dispel these myths and flat out mistakes!!! Especially in a time where there are so many on TH-cam just piling on the false BS or info with out giving the true groundwork as to why!!! Great job!!!
I don’t think he explains “why” about anything, he just explains what a bow shop will do. they will move you rest out of line with your cams to get it to shoot a bullet hole. shodden they be making the bow square meaning the cams are straight to the riser and the rest supporting the arrow directly behind the string. I understand that the manufacturer tell the bow shop to move the rest 13/16ths from the riser but won’t that make the arrow canted left or do you need to add cam lean to straighten the arrow as it’s siting on the rest as we’ll.
The "lean" is already there. Between the fraction of an angle that the cams are on and the natural way a bow is drawn, it flys much straighter when aimed at that slight angle. It you line it up, like I use to, your forcing the arrow out at a bad trajectory causing the arrow to wobble in flight. I couldn't keep on target for the life of me before literally watching this video and running outside to adjust my bow. Now I'm slamming shot after shot on my previous arrow without adjusting anything else other than than realigning my sight. This actually works, I'm impressed.
I’m 67 and I am just getting interested in archery. I really learn a lot by watching your videos. I would be lost without them. Thank you so much.
I agree 100% with you, my opinion is a lot of this gets started to help “bow shops” put money in their pockets. It’s kinda like a mechanic who knows that the person they are dealing with really doesn’t understand mechanics. I feel so many “bow shops” today take a guy or gal money and never really teach them about their equipment or archery itself. Sad really, archery is such a fun and peaceful thing to do. Thanks for keeping it real.
To play devils advocate, they gotta make money somehow. It’s already a hard business to make a lot in, especially with online sales. If everyone knew how to work on their bows, the shops would be outta business.
@@thetowndrunk988 what's your point? If everyone knew how to swap a head, we wouldn't have car repair shops either. People either have the aptitude for mechanical and technical stuff or they don't. Trust me, way more people don't. Shops aren't going anywhere. Cars or bows. Now, cars and bows both may be a thing of the past one day, but that's a different conversation all together.
@@pre_ban_andy but a car dealer makes a crap ton more money to begin with. That’s the whole point. A bow shop, especially one that doesn’t also sell guns, is operating off of peanuts, so I say give em all the business you can afford to, even if you know what you’re doing. Maybe it’s just the nostalgia of an old man like me, but I still enjoy walking into an actual shop to buy stuff, rather than using that rainforest website.
When we have days when we are selling 40 bows a day we dont allow customers in the shop its dangerous and not enough room most all bows we will put in time and everything we're it should be and tell them if they have troubles you can spend 4 hrs with one 1 customer and cand get a bullet hole I can but they have a lot to learn about form and I cant teach that in a hour we would never get anything done we have 3 people that have placed top 3 in the world championships, and one that has won 3 times so we know how to set bows up , and they send us too school at Mathews and hoyt every year if we need it or not . Most stock strings and cables are junk almost all of us change them over too quality strings first thing , most customers are not willing to do that . And I dont blame them it's hard to spend another $150 after buying a bow especially after buying a complete set up . I had a customer bring his bow in and said he cant shoot it , I pulled it back and immediately noticed know layoff and could feel the bottom cam hitting way to soon I moved the draw stop back one spot to see how bad it immediately was a different bow it that let off and the poundage seemed lower . I put it in time the best I could because they were way over twisted I finally talked him in to ordering a new quality set of string and cables. His bow has never been back too the shop . I have been out of it for awhile because of health issues there used to be bows that came with winners choice today there are probably better strings that come on bows .
One thing I start with AFTER setting the rest at manufacturers spec position is screwing in a long target stabilizer. Then with an arrow mounted on the string and in the rest I look from behind the bow and see if the arrow sitting on the string lines up with the stabilizer. Manufacturers will not machine a stabilizer mounting bushing that is not perfectly 90 degrees to the axis of the bow. I have used this system for 10-15 years and it’s so close to zero I very seldom have had to move the rest. I get bullet holes in paper 99% of the time on the first shot.
Like your incite you bring to your channel. I've watched several of your review videos of bows, as I'm just getting into the sport. I've been doing a lot of research and reading about everything I can, trying to eliminate getting into bad habits from the start. A video like this is a great help in that direction. A big concern I have is learning who to listen to because there is so much information and
opinions out there and I'm just learning the sport and all the terminology that goes along with it. Thanks
Good info! But I wish I would have shimmed earlier. After 1 year of trying really everything with my Ventum 33 and not getting it really 100% tuned, I finally shimmed the top cam to the right just a bit and voila, fixed blade, field point, bare shaft in one group at 40 yards. Me: happy
Congratulations on presenting one of the best Channels on this subject. Your enthusiasm is infectious.
For what it's worth, when I first got into compound bows, as a 'rookie', I also expected full alignment meant 'full accuracy'.... until I learnt about what I now call "IBT".
Quite a few years on, as a retired Engineer, with a keen interest in compound bow design/performance, I have been perplexed at the seemingly endless focus on peripheral issues, that can actually or might effect accuracy, but the single, by far most important fundamental factor, is rarely addressed.
That factor is bow torque that is innate or integral to the specific bow design; hereinafter refered to as "Integral Bow Torque" or "IBT". Suffice to say, archers are well aware of the importance of proper technique in gripping, or should I say, supporting, the bow, so as to avoid torquing the riser and avoiding nock face pressure etc, but, ironically, IBT is regularly never mentioned at all, in bow reviews and bow selection in general. Archers and hunters who are not Engineers have sought to argue that IBT is not a problem, because it generates the same, consistant bow structure response, during each draw/ release cycle. This is profoundly misguided, frankly wrong, reasoning. The ability of any projectile based weapon to consistantly send the projectile to the point of aim, across all range distances, requires that the stucture supporting the energised projectile, supports, but does not impose lateral or vertical forces on the projectile throughout the projectiles path out of the supporting structure. In the case of compound bows, the key points of support for the projectile/arrow are the rest and nock point. It is therefore obvious, that maximum consistant accuracy can only occur when nock travel has neutral lateral and neutral vertical movement after release from full draw. Just as important is that the arrow rest does not exhibit lateral (horizontal plane) rotation, that can cause lateral forces on the arrow shaft. There is no avoiding these realities other than by seeking to deny them. It is of course possible to adjust nock height, rest position and, most significantly, lateral sight pin settings, to consistantly compensate for IBT at a specific range distance. However, because IBT causes the arrows lateral trajectory to gently curve away from the line of aim, lateral pin adjustment must be customised for a specifuc range distance! Thus, I can get any number of bows to group tightly, group after group, at say 20 yards. However, the IBT will always introduce innate, incrementally greater inaccuracy at any longer distances. Unfortunately, many archers/ hunters, failing to take IBT into account, spend many, many wasted hours on peripheral factors.
Bow manufactures are aware of the importance of IBT but seek to ignore it. The only manufacturer I have observed openly, but briefly, acknowledging its importance was G5 Prime.
So, to all my fellow compound bow enthusiasts, before you possibly spend more money and time on speculating over peripheral stuff, may I suggest you sweat on IBT and let bow manufacturers know you're expecting future models to have zero IBT and zero vertical nock travel after release from full draw.
Some really good info here, thank you. So many people don't give a second thought to a bow being set up to a manufacturer's spec as the design engineers intended. It was tested to those specs, it only makes sense. On a diferent note, I love the buss cables on my Bowtechs, tuning is a breeze.
Awesome explanation. I've been shooting, tuning and hunting with bows probably since before you were born...learned several things here. Never even heard the term "berger button" before.
Thanks for you good points of view. I found you are the first on TH-cam who verry straight of bow tuning priorities👍I started my archery with a PSE Stinger Max two years ago and now switched to a PSE Evo Evl 32 ( Verry nice bow) and first i shot my bow after installation of nokepoint, rest and scoop. I needed a short time for the adjustment of peep and drawlenght but a lot of days for the adjustment of the rest and scoop. Walk back and french tuning and finding of centershot. Now i got a bow which perfect adjusted to me. At least i tried a paper tuning just for fun and found a nice image with my homemade finished arrows (Carbon Hunter) I will say every archer have to investigate a little time to get a bow thats perfect to shoting for him. I am refering you have to shot your bow to gain experiance and a good adjustment for your own shoting 😉At least really, sorry for my englisch it is not my native language and so long from good old Germany 👋
Great video as always! The nocking point being in the center of the string only works for bows like recent model Mathews and PSE's with symmetrical cams, adequate clearance off the shelf AND all of the other factors you mentioned being accounted for correctly. That point also tends to be 90 degrees from the Berger button hole on those models so same, same. I know I'm not the only one to come to that conclusion but I have definitely recommended it as a starting point so sorry for the questions ;)
LOLOLOL! Leave it to the TH-camrs to be handing out different opinions. 😆
Spot on ! I bought an elite envision got crazy noise and it’s not a bolt on accessory but I’ll figure it out. Shoots awesome! The basics are 90 percent of any aquired skill yet people focus on the 10 percent that creates minor improvement.
Thank you, I had my rest set up completely wrong. Set it to 13/16 off of the riser and now with just a tiny sight adjustment, I'm banging off my own arrows almost every shot at 15 yards. Can finely start moving my target back 😊
Nate, thanks for what you stress in Myth 5... So much "online cruft" goes straight to shimming (or other harsh tuning like yoke, etc). I totally agree with the grip being a huge issue (as you and I have discussed in my journey) but I would add to grip is anchor point. I recently discovered (and had run into this early in my bow learnings) that I was actually torquing the string on my face and also torquing the release. Both produce similar things as grip issues. Was maddening to figure out, especially the torquing the release.
Agreed on face to string pressure. I use a handheld button release that has a long neck. I felt my anchor point was too far back causing string torquing. I just purchased a B3 Exit with a short neck and what a diff it made in my groupings and overall anchor point.
I love the presentation. You are a professional archer that THINK instead of Parroting others. I agree with all the your arrow dynamic and trajectory analysis which I as a Bear Bow shooter applied to my Bow especially the arrow rest shape, functionality and position on the bow shelf. Thanks
Wow take a breath lol
Very good info ! You pack a lot of info into a none stop , no wasted pause or thinking it just flows out!
Glad I watched , I’ll subscribe, cause I think you have a lot to offer !
I am very new to archery and have shot about 50 arrows or so in my life. I just got my first (second hand) bow a few days ago and noticed that, after installing my stabilizer, my arrow was pointing way off to the left. I got OBSESSED at trying to fix this problem and haven't even properly shot the bow because of it. Im SO happy to hear you say this as I can now let it go and just get to tuning my bow properly through paper tuning and not just eyesight. Thank you for giving my brain a break haha. I still think its strange as it seems that my bowstring is too far off to the right, making my arrows having to rest crazy close to the edge of the bow. It seems like somehow my string is offset to the right. I also noticed that my cable slide is rather far away from the string and when putting the cables into the slide, it makes my arrow point even further to the left. Weird...
I lined my center shot up by eye and it worked perfectly
I had issues with the drop away rest on my bow. The little clamp slid on the down cable. One of these days I will just serve it in, but I'm getting pretty close to new string time so it works for now. Good video. I always focus on form before tuning with my 4H archery and JOAD kids. I've never even thought about tuning on the Genesis bows we use for NASP.
Do like half a inch of a technique called Half Hitching the string above the cable clamp. Let the clamp slide snug to the half hitch you made problem solved
You have a new sub. I went shooting with a buddy and he noticed my arrows were flying ass high but hitting center started doing research because I'm very new to this and he's very new to shooting a bow as well and trying to find a solution has been difficult.
On my Mathews, if you run the arrow straight through the Berger and 90 deg off the string, the nocking point ends up being dead center of the string. Great info.
Just shot my first practice round...man am I hooked. Such a great way to spend time. I've watched a bunch of your videos the past few days. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and passion of archery. God Bless
A wealth of archery knowledge. You da’ man good one 👍
Thanks 👍
Thank you for this video. Totally agree. I even shoot a Hind-sight to eliminate torque. I've gotten used to it and can tweak it if needed. My brother says I shoot my bow too much, but I'm learning how my bow handles. I notice a slight pull left in colder weather from warm Temps, so I can slightly adjust to fix torque as hunting season progresses.
Would like to learn the ins/outs of arrow lingo - arrow spine, weights, diameters; i know this, but when listening to experienced folks chat about different arrows and they "throw" around the lingo, it can get confusing. Also, it seems each arrow manufacturer use different lingo to describe their arrows (ie. 340's vs 25's), etc. This video segment is a great idea, TIA!
Video and Audio are on point...oh and content isn't bad either 😂
Hahah how dare you bring up the grip "these bows are hard to tune, I used this grip on the other brand for 5 years with no issues, now on this new brand I have all kinds of issues. Let's not even start with my trigger hammering issue 🤣" on a side note the newer prime shims are very simple, more like the top hats than tiny shims. Great content 👍 keep up the great work
Would you set your nock point before or after you install a whisker biscuit
Nock point first. Then move rest to accommodate location.
@@averagejackarchery Thanks for the info. That's kind of what I thought but it's nice to have someone in the business to look to for answers.
Thank you! Could you please do a video on the process of using the Easton T Square.
Hey good day hope all is well.
I’ve had this windage problem since the beginning. The pro shop set up my bow apparently I’m a newbie so I don’t know. My windage is all the way to the left. I’m hitting middle like that, I think that’s not right so I would like to know how to get to you so you can fix it for me I have a bear adapt plus. I’m coming from Staten Island NY. Thanks in advance. 🙏🏽
Hoyt’s Binary Cam system is very simple to tune. I have a Ventum 33 and my bow tech simply swapped the small spacers on each side. Took a bow press, a small Hoyt “spacer” wrench and less than 4 minutes time. Shooting bullet holes. Can’t get much easier than that.
Is your top cam leaning to right really bad and limbs look crooked??
I have the VXR 2020 as when it was made I think right it on one side I think it's like an inch in a quarter on the other side it's not even an inch from the limb from the limb to the inside of the camp so it's definitely not in the center
As far as point number 4 (the nocking point location) some bows like the Mathews trx series do shoot the best with the nock point dead center between the axles
Always grateful that you take the time to put out archery videos.
Glad you like them!
I think this is the first time i agree with you Nate. Both the power house and projectiles are equally important. To look only at the bow or the arrow is missing the other half of the equation.
Great video nat. Need to Cole check out the shop one if these days. I travel from Tyrone clear to weavers for a bow shop. There is a few closet but I've gotten to know and trust them guys down there.
I smash that subscribe button today, the way you explain stuff is like me and you were outside shooting in the backyard
My shop used a framing square lol if it works it works but my fletching keeps hitting my rest and. I have a trophy ridge quick shot or whatever and it doesn't adjust up and down. It's frustrating right now lol had to take a break from shooting
Bow tech here. Completely agree with the comments about the Mathews tophats being easier than shims but we still very regularly change out shims on other bows to fix tuning and leave that centershot within +- 1/16” of that ideal 13/16”. I guess it’s something I’ve done for a while now but how important do you think that 13/16” is? (Before we change em we obviously shoot it ourselves through paper and often verify with another tech to make sure the tears match)
Slightly related to this, what do you personally do when you shoot perfect, consistent bullet holes through paper and have the customer verify it’s tuned to them and it’s WAY off? Often times, with 30+ minutes of coaching, I cannot get the customer to shoot without torquing. If it’s a super consistent bad year for them I usually will end up breaking out the shins but often times just tell them to watch some videos, practice, and we can retune later when they’re more comfortable. If they’re hunting like that we tell them that a small diameter mechanical is the way to go 100% too.
Thanks for taking the time to read this!
I worked in a sporting goods store as the bow tech for 7 years and all the little tricks for tuning and how easy it is to get a bow out of tune and/or keeping a compund bow perfectly in tune drove me to stick to my longbow for all my target shooting and hunting. Without a bow press in my house it literally drove me nuts keeping my bow intune shooting its best. Strings and bow systems are better now but just tuning it once and trusting it will be the same 6 months from the tune is unrealistic. Temperature change, string stretch, any small adjustments, heck just shooting it is enought to make your bow change.
Would you consider an ordered list of what to check first - last on a new bow and what steps come first - last tuning?
I love your enthusiasm with setting up your equipment.
I'm brand new to the sport, and appreciate your videos.. Thanks
Thanx for the tip, what arrow do you recommend for a bear adapt 70 set at. 62. I’ll be shooting 100 grain shwackers?
I learned the hard way the part about getting to know my bow before worrying about most other stuff. My PSE Supra RTX, 40ATA and SE cam, for example, doesn't like arrows that weigh under 320 grains. Even though the commonly held wisdom states that any arrow over the total weight of 5 grains per pound of draw weight would mean any arrow just over 280 grains would do. The bow would make a terrible snapping sound when I released the string.
So what would you move first on a bowtech with a dead lock system? Still trying everything before you move the cams?
Shimming a PSE usually meant going into a worse position in my cases. Top or bottom cam would already have lean, and I'd end up giving the limb more leverage that didn't need it, and I can't just buy stiffer limbs within deflection tolerance online.
Thanks Nate for all the great info you provide. I just built a full bow shop and plan on opening to the public in a few years when I get a good base of knowledge. I am definitely not confident enough now to start working on others equipment. I have an Elite Remedy I shoot for 3D and indoor. I am about to replace the string and cables. Can you give me the order of set up steps you use to tune a target bow? I would greatly appreciate your advice. Thanks again
th-cam.com/video/RQqUVFzrheE/w-d-xo.html
Nate is one of the best at actually responding
Hahahaa...I got 2 Bowtech Destroyer 350s from 2010 that I've got the arrow lined up perfectly with the stabilizer and shooting bulletholes. As well, I also have a Diamond Infinite Edge Pro that I've tuned the same way. I do have a 2022 Bowtech Solution SS with binary cams that the arrow sits pointed slightly out to the left of my stabilizer, but I'm okay with that, because there's no way to change the cam to lean perfectly to get perfect centershot alignment with the stabilizer. So, yeah, it depends on the design of the bow/cam system whether or not you can get perfect centershot on the arrow to the stabilizer.
I wish I would have watched your video last night before I untuned my bow. I tried aligning my arrow square with my bow and after two arrows, I realized fletchings were hitting the strings. So now back to square one of putting it back the way it was. 😖
My bowtech manual for my cp28 does say to find the center shot. It just says to make each dimension to the arrow equal
Brother you have a way of explaining things !!! Great video
Another insightful video. Thanks and Happy Father's Day!!!
Thank you!
So much blue Elite gear. It’s glorious.
I wish I could find elite polo shirts to wear to work:(
I just got done talking to Lionel Richie he says he’s willing to change the name of his song stuck on you to stuck on blue, you’re welcome
I've never considered lining up an arrow with my stabilizer, but when setting up my bow I do make sure my arrow lines up with my string while making sure my level is level.
Shop I go to lines up string with center of grip for center shot 😬 I'll have to measure when I get home.. Thanks for all the great content!!!
Great content.....I wish we had a super meticulous bow tech locally!...just wanna learn myself
I bought the Axcel Hunting Slider Sight ArmorTech Lite Fixed Mount 41mm Scope, and when shooting my Bowtech SS34 in the store I already mentioned that I couldn't fully see it in the 5/32 peepsight!
So I bought the wrong scope it should have been a 31mm scope I think!
what should i do now?
Just getting into bows about 2 months ago, so long story 🤣 my wife and her dad got together and decided to buy me a bow so I can learn and hunt with it, they bought me the Bear cruzer g2 and had the DL maxed as im 6 foot 5 inch and found out after they got it that my DL is 31 and a half 🤦♂️😂 so, Bear cruzer g2 maxed at 29 😔 I learned to use it anyway as it was what I had and with being disabled and the 2 of us having 10 kids, 5 hers and 5 mine that we have full custody of, buying another bow wasn't really an option especially given the bow price for us big guys 😡 I couldn't control the bow properly and couldn't get my arrows in a 2 inch at 20 yards, my wife decided she would fix this problem, did her research and bought me the PSE Freak SP and it worked beautifully wow what a difference it made in comfort, shot placement, but most of all, it boosted my confidence in hunting so, got my bear and deer tags for both archery and rifle and wouldn't ya know it, 3 days before I head out for bear archery one of my children decided they would dry fire dads new bow and hide it back in its case 😭🤦♂️🙊 needless to say, I had to take the Bear cruzer g2 😱 well, I was successful, I got my bear, my very first animal to start my hunting story with many more to come in the future hopefully, yes I started late in life learning to hunt as I didn't have anyone to take me and teach me but want to learn and take my children... So, now that I've said all that 😂🤣😂 the PSE freak sp needed new cams, it takes almost 2 weeks for anyone to get them, they are on their way for the bow shop that's doing my repairs for me this one time as I like to learn to do my own work on anything I own and I am learning bows now, question is, do the cams need to always be what came on that bow? Or can you have a bow set up and chose to go with cams from a different manufacturer? 🤔 by next year I will have extra parts for every bit of this bow for backups just incase, I just thought that if I could pick cams that are easily available to pick up anywhere and fit my bow and comfort level then it would be smarter to make that change instead of waiting 2 weeks directly from the manufacturer 🤦♂️🤷♂️🙈😁 is there anything else I should know about this particular bow? Maybe give me some idea of things to keep an eye on? Upgrades? Experience?
Thank you for all the information you shared, things I've learned so far from you and others on this platform I will pass on to my children and grandchildren and feel like I can be confident in doing so as I know this knowledge is indeed good and learned through experience as well... Thank you soo much
Also, now that the Bear cruzer g2 is broke in and got its first animal, it is currently being passed down already to one of my sons as his first bow and just like me, he is picking it up very quickly but, ill wait until next year before I let him actually hunt with it as I should have done the same, learned some things while hunting but, next year will be even better as I grow more and more
On my PSE DRIVE NXT 33 the centre of the string is 90 degrees from the screw hole.
So that would make the center of the string the nock point.
Thank you so much for all the work you are doing. I learned a lot from your videos. Take care m8.
Another great topic for a video and an important one to keep many of us from going down some rabbit 🐇 holes 🕳. Thanks again Nate! 🏹🦌
You bet!
My Hoyt manual says to get center shot starting point between 1 inch to 5/8ths inches from (Ham)Berger Button. 😁 I got my bow tuned within a few shots. I didn’t even need to fine tune for field points and broadheads. Groups are almost robinhood precise. 🏹🎯 I like a short D-Loop too some people have long d-loop 🤷🏼♂️
16/16"-10/16"!!! Sounds like the middle is right where it should be.... ;)
Long d loop helps in low light
@@MyLonewolf25 I don't use a D-loop at all so could you explain to me how a long D-loop helps under low light conditions? Thanks.
@@MyLonewolf25 please explain because I’m not following
Pertinent, maybe. I just bought a Blackout Distinct - $529 , from Bass Pro - 2023. I cannot get rid of right tear, paper tuning. I find the tiller is out by 7/16 - nearly 1/2"
My query is whether modern, past parallel bows, are ok with unequal tiller Or should I start turning limb bolts?
Hahah now that you have acknowledged the rubber band on the string I can go back to the beginning and actually pay attention this time 😂😂😂
🤣🤣🤣
I've got a bow w a tail high tear, would dropping the d loop a bit help w this situation. Guy is wanting to use a whisker biscuit 63 lbs 29.5 in arrows, 300 spine. 175 total weight up front. ....
Where do you actually set the T-square relative to the berger hole? Where should the center of the shaft align with the berger hole?
th-cam.com/video/RQqUVFzrheE/w-d-xo.html
Wow, what a great video!!!
Question: what's a good scale for measuring draw weight? I am rehabbing my shoulder so I would like to measure it. I backed my "non-speed" bow off a full turn and I have progressed to where I may be ready to increase my draw weight a bit. Thanks.
th-cam.com/video/KSetX1tNEA4/w-d-xo.html Check out the description of this video for the scale I use with my DIY drawboard build!
Thanks for the great info! As always you share your knowledge in a very understandable way.
Great information, thank you.
Hello I'm new to archery. My goal is to practice until and prepare myself for our next dear season. I live in Crestline , ca. I e been doing some practicing . I've got a martin lynx & a high country extreme .like I said I'm new to archery .so any help would be greatly appreciated . Want to restring the one I choose. Any suggestions on where to restring & or tune? I'm on a budget but want to make my bow accurate.. hope to hear from you soon . Bill
I
I'm pretty mechanically inclined & willing to do some if I can.😊
Ok so this number would it be the same for a finger shot compound ?
Thank you so much, I spent so long trying to paper tune my bow with no success. However, I was grouping incredibly well at 20, 30, 40, 50 and 60 yards. Gave up and just concentrated on technique.
Sounds like your undersplind.
Thow on a broadlead
so 13/16 is a good starting point, how far in or out are you comfortable moving the rest before you consider shimming (all other factors accounted for first obviously). my PSE NTN 33 shoots light arrows dead nut bullet holes at 13/16 but my heavier set up (still only 475gr) shoots bullets at 3/4. (and to make sure it wasnt a spine issue, I beefed up the point weight on my 340 spine light arrows and it was really a tuning nightmare, 300s only necessitated that small adjustment to the rest to 3/4)
You get 1/8" of "legal" play left or right before you've started to go out of spec.
@@averagejackarchery so 13/16 horizontaly. How about vertical… should we align the middle of the arrow with the middle of the holes ? First time building my bow :)
Then again, more bows like Mathews are designed to be shimmed instead of yoke tuned. So know the equipment rather. Would you say the SET whatever thing on your elite is the 10th thing to touch if the rest is at centershot and you have a tear?
What would make my string way off as far as center shot , when I try to do 13/16 it's way off like front is 13/16 and the far side of the arrow will be like 1" or more...what happend?.
Great video!
Prime has always been recommending 7/8" from the burger button to the center of the arrow
How far down the list is yolk tuning? I tried everything to correct a knock right tear on my Torrex to no avail, I'm ready to start twisting some yolks. Also, there is wear on my string stop were the string is hitting it to the right of center which explains alot. Thanks
For bows with yokes, yoke tuning is a necessity to me. Some more than others. Definitely use them on your Torrex for tuning.
When using the T-Square should the bottom of the t-square line up with the bottom of the berger hole or should it bisect the berger hole?
I have the bottom edge of the T square line up with the bottom edge of the berger hole.
I have a Energy 35 as well! What is brand/model of the cable rod/roller you have on that bow?
AAE Slippery Slide/FirstStrings Pro Glide. They're one in the same.
What shop do you work at in Clearfeild? Is it the one next to grice? I live in the state college area and would like to check it out.
Jim's Sports Center.
I just dry fired my new bow. Was trying out a handheld release for the first time. So focused on form and technique that I forgot to nock a dang arrow. Doh!
Don’t feel bad. I just watched a buddy do the exact same thing.
@@neils9241 Its a painful lesson. I’ve got to take it to the shop next week and see what the damage is. Luckily I didn’t get injured.
@@dant4786 Chances are there's no damage. Put the string back on off it jumped and keep going. I see it happen a lot. Heck I've done it, I've blow knocks apart on accident and just restrung the bow and kept going. Its certainly not ideal but I feel like there is also a lot of hysteria around this sort of incident.
@@NoMatureContent Good to know. It definitely blew apart a yoke so I need to get that replaced before I can do anything. Which is part of why I want to get it looked at.
@@dant4786 Jeez thats unfortunate. definitely get that replaced, obviously. But besides that if there's no physical damage to the cam's you'll be pretty right to go.
I've even had strings roll the edge on cams and after I file it back its been fine.
Certainly not advocating this sort of thing but mistakes do happen and they don't need to be terminal.
I just imagine how many times prehistoric people had this issue and just had to soldier on in spite of it. Especially with primitive technology.
Almost every used bow I've bought needed yoke/shimming. Usually these "untunable" bows are good deals that just need TLC.
Should your string , arrow and sight pin be inline? My sight pin is to the left of my string when I line up string and arrow. I'm getting bullet hole through paper and when I went to sight in my pin ended up to the left and really could go another click or 2.
I'm right handed
Pins left of sting is normal and fine now if it’s a inch to the left then you have a problem..
Its maybe 1/8 -3/16 of an inch left of string
Just wasn't sure if that was normal, my last bow everything lined up
Totally normal for the pins to be to the left of the string or arrow as a righty! Don't sweat it.
Hi A.J.A . I'm a little confused , after 45 years of tuning bows , I was always under the impression that as the string stretches, and gets longer ,the poundage goes up. You stated that when your A.T.A was over spec, by just a 1/16" (I'm assuming because of the string stretching) you lost 2-3 lbs. of draw weight. I don't understand that, please explain. Thanks.
If the strings and cables stretch, then the limbs aren't as under much load to start. Therefore they cannot peak as high in their load through the draw cycle. Hope that helps!
Sorry, Not really. Once, "Back in The Day" a friend had a "problem" with his bow, (1990 Ben Person "Flame" ?) after he brought it to a
"Bow-Shop" when his string broke, and they didn't know what the factory string length was, (or didn't care, or didn't have one, etc) so long story short, when I finally checked his bow out, what was once set at 75 lbs. was now at 90 lbs. !! (draw length increased tremendously, too) because they wound up putting a string on that was 2" too long ! So as I have done in the past, to check, measure your poundage, take the string off, and put one on, just one inch longer, without touching anything else, and then measure the poundage again. Were just talking about string length, not timing cable length. When timing cables stretch, poundage goes down. I only twist the timing cables to bring the poundage back to spec. When the string stretches, the poundage goes up, and I only twist the string to bring the draw length back into spec. after the timing cable adjustment for poundage.Thanks, Love your channel, one of the best, I always recommend it, to everyone.@@averagejackarchery
Prime says 7/8 from the shelf and berger hole plus or minus 1/8 but I agree I tune my bow where it shoots best and I find my bad shots are still good accurate shots the bow is just very forgiving
My cam on my bow is centered, but then again i have a 1st gen, of wait the 1st split limb compound bow.
Great video, too bad I have no clue what you're talking about, total noob here. But, you got a subscriber for sure. Going to check your channel for any possible beginner videos. I'm about 50 or so shots in on a Diamond Edge 320, didn't want to drop a ton of money on my first compound bow.
Thanks for what you do...
Awesome video!! Thanks
Nate, did you make a video oh what should do tune first?
Awesome video jack keep up the great work regards Brett
Thanks I needed that information 😊
Glad it was helpful!
I heard Levi Morgan measures the ata to find his d loop position
Thanks a million for all your content
You bet! Thanks for watching!
Bow gets the arrow downrange, and a car gets the driver downrange. A better analogy might be the mechanic never checks out the driver to make sure he knows how to operate the car before diagnosing the reported car issues.
If you trust that the riser is machined that exact, and I mean every one of those risers, then you do you. I have a laser light that attaches where your sight goes. You simple nock an arrow, align the laser first to make sure it’s dead center on the string, then move that laser abs see if it will follow the middle of that shaft all the way to the point. If it does not, then you adjust the rest until it does. I dont even trust that plunger hole to be where level is either. But hey, you do you.