Bullshot
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This would likely cause inconsistent planing though. It wouldn’t be repeatedly left.Also could be that your inserts aren’t square with your arrow. Having a broadhead not square to your arrow can cause planing like you have that won’t show up with field points.
Another thing to consider is having the proper spine stiffness. Too weak or too stiff of an arrow can cause this issue that you’re having as well.
Yep, level 2 3/4 black magicThe only thing I'll add is nock tuning. Don't be afraid to rotate your arrow to the next vane. It can make a pretty big difference at times
It would be if you were only shooting one arrow. You are correct though if shooting multiple arrows.This would likely cause inconsistent planing though. It wouldn’t be repeatedly left.
Wouldn't moving the rest cause it to be out of alignment with the string and then you'd get wobbly arrow flight? I'm a noob, so just curious-
Just exactly how wide is a gnat’s ass?Not micro adjustments.
About three short and curlyJust exactly how wide is a gnat’s ass?
The goal of tuning is to get the rest in line with the path traveled by the nocking point during the shot. This can be achieved via various combinations of adjusting rest windage/elevation, nocking point location, cam timing, and cam lean/lateral position.Wouldn't moving the rest cause it to be out of alignment with the string and then you'd get wobbly arrow flight? I'm a noob, so just curious-
That's called lateral thinking.The goal of tuning is to get the rest in line with the path traveled by the nocking point during the shot. This can be achieved via various combinations of adjusting rest windage/elevation, nocking point location, cam timing, and cam lean/lateral position.
For left/right alignment, a purist would say the "correct" method is to adjust rest windage to the manufacturer's recommended centershot measurement (usually 13/16") then adjust the cams' lateral position (via shimming) and/or lean (via yoke tuning) as needed to get the desired tuning result. But adjusting cams (usually) requires a bow press and more time/effort compared to just adjusting rest windage. It's often possible to get a good tune (i.e., bullethole paper tear, same bareshaft and fletched shaft POI, same field point and broadhead POI) solely by adjusting the rest without touching the cams, but this sometimes results in the arrow pointing significantly above/below level or left/right of (apparent) center when the bow is at rest. IMO it ain't stupid if it works though (even it it looks stupid and the purists say it's not the "proper" technique).
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