This^^^. I’ve seen a lot of these over the years. Some a lot worse than others. Something I have NOT seen is a limb failure due to this issue. Cut it. Sand it. And glue it. Then go shoot.
Unless the cord is actually getting hung up on the quiver it’s really a non issue if it touches. I’ve had plenty of set ups that the quiver would touch the cord with zero issues.
The answer is both. Having a good shop is going to help you when learning. If you support them by buying bows/arrows/supplies they’ll help answer tuning questions etc most of the time. They’ll probably even show you stuff also. I never had an issue helping guys who supported the shop I worked at...
Well I’ll be at the Scheels store doing training so that one is already covered. Thanks for the suggestions so far. I wasn’t expecting there to be a ton of excitement in Fargo haha
I’ll be heading to Fargo next month for training. Any good places to eat or cool stuff I should see? Not sure how much free time I’ll actually have but I’d like to have something in my back pocket to do.
The spot on the cam where it’s damaged will not hurt the tune of the bow. It’ll be an eyesore that’s it. Sand it and polish it. Check it with a cotton ball after to help detect any rough or sharp spots. You can even clean the area up with a black paint pen to hide it. I’ve cleaned up a lot worse...
Do you shoot consistently in that position? If so don’t worry about it. A lot of the top pros don’t have perfect form or shoot bows that actually fit them according to the “form experts” out there. I shoot with a similar elbow position. I’ve tried shooting with it lower and my shooting suffered...
i don’t know if this has been asked yet but where did you set your loop at? The newer Mathew’s are designed to have the knocking point centered between the cams. If yours is not I’d reset it based on this and then level your rest according to that as well. If your set up to high it can result in...