I do mine straight an even with paper, but a high percentage of people shoot, practice at a decline angle anyways so it will probably be better for them to do it at a angle down.
Question for you sir if your rest is a touch to the left and not dead in line but everything is flying correctly and I’m shooting bullet holes do I need to leave it alone or adjust the cables to get it center shot
huge fan of you guys at lancaster, but i have to open my mouth a little lol the downward angle you're shooting into the paper on this video can give a false high tear, best to have the arrow as level as possible through the paper :) and you should also recommend shooting through paper at different distances, close for initial setup and farther out (20-ish feet) to diagnose arrow spine issues and to fine tune. ok im done lol :) keep up the good work :)
Hey, thanks for the kind words. Just a few explanations here so following readers understand....you won't get a false high tear at that angle if your arrow is flying straight. The nock still follows directly in the middle of the fletchings. The downward angle is not the same as an arrow that's flying nock high. That tears the paper differently than an arrow flying straight, but at a downward angle. We don't advocate the distance paper tuning to check for spine issues. We prefer bareshaft tuning at distance to define spine problems, because if an arrow is just slightly under or over spined, you can get a bullet hole shooting a fletched arrow through paper at 20 feet. The fletchings can mask that problem. For big spine issues...yes, you will see those shooting through paper at distance. But that's not as precise a tuning test as bareshaft tuning for identifying spine issues. Thanks for watching!
You want it further than a few feet. I've run into issues at shooting at 5ft with a bear shaft where it's a bullet hole. Go back to 20 yards and I'm hitting knock right. I'd suggest starting off close to get it 90% of the way there then move back to about 20 yards to fine tune.
Really stupid to describe the move as “away or towards”, the riser. Duh! Some of us shoot left handed! Move your rest in the direction of the tip: left tear, move your rest right.
PJ Riley, are You seriously trying - not making, trying - make paper test with that angle?? :D Let me tell you, if you are an archery shop expert, you should delete this recording ASAP. The paper test is performed ONLY at a 90 degree angle. I really can't believe what I'm seeing..
Thanks for this video.
There's nothing to thank for :D It's terribly wrong :D
I do mine straight an even with paper, but a high percentage of people shoot, practice at a decline angle anyways so it will probably be better for them to do it at a angle down.
Does it matter if your bow is on an angle aiming towards paper?
I was wondering the samething
Haha you would think so
Yep it does
Duh?
Very much so
What would cause a right tear that is corrected by moving the rest to the right?
Now how do you do the rest 🤔
Wow never knew about such thing
What can be wrong if the arrows is making a line of a hole in the paper.
Question for you sir if your rest is a touch to the left and not dead in line but everything is flying correctly and I’m shooting bullet holes do I need to leave it alone or adjust the cables to get it center shot
If it tunes, leave it alone
Thank you sir
ah, ok. Just like that!
I'll try it so close.
Shoot a different arrow and see if it's also a bullet hole. My different arrows shoot slightly different holes.
Then you will need to turn nock on that arrow until you get a bullet hole
Thanks
huge fan of you guys at lancaster, but i have to open my mouth a little lol
the downward angle you're shooting into the paper on this video can give a false high tear,
best to have the arrow as level as possible through the paper :)
and you should also recommend shooting through paper at different distances,
close for initial setup and farther out (20-ish feet) to diagnose arrow spine issues and to fine tune.
ok im done lol :) keep up the good work :)
Hey, thanks for the kind words. Just a few explanations here so following readers understand....you won't get a false high tear at that angle if your arrow is flying straight. The nock still follows directly in the middle of the fletchings. The downward angle is not the same as an arrow that's flying nock high. That tears the paper differently than an arrow flying straight, but at a downward angle. We don't advocate the distance paper tuning to check for spine issues. We prefer bareshaft tuning at distance to define spine problems, because if an arrow is just slightly under or over spined, you can get a bullet hole shooting a fletched arrow through paper at 20 feet. The fletchings can mask that problem. For big spine issues...yes, you will see those shooting through paper at distance. But that's not as precise a tuning test as bareshaft tuning for identifying spine issues. Thanks for watching!
If you go out shouting 3d or hunting you will shoot at an angle and that does not change anything
This conversation right here was productive! 👍 nice!
Yep. Definitely bareshaft at around 20’
👍🏻👊🏻🇺🇸
It would be great if one could read the bloody graphic!!
i got told off for shooting paper at under 10m ? i got told the arrow stablises at 15-20 meters , hmmm whos right
You want it further than a few feet. I've run into issues at shooting at 5ft with a bear shaft where it's a bullet hole. Go back to 20 yards and I'm hitting knock right.
I'd suggest starting off close to get it 90% of the way there then move back to about 20 yards to fine tune.
Ah, you shouldn’t be shooting ‘downhill’ 😳
Really stupid to describe the move as “away or towards”, the riser. Duh! Some of us shoot left handed! Move your rest in the direction of the tip: left tear, move your rest right.
Correct, some of you are wrong-handed.
Thanks boss
PJ Riley, are You seriously trying - not making, trying - make paper test with that angle?? :D Let me tell you, if you are an archery shop expert, you should delete this recording ASAP. The paper test is performed ONLY at a 90 degree angle. I really can't believe what I'm seeing..
Nope! Tried it and got the same results.