- Thread Starter
- #21
jcarb
FNG
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2019
- Messages
- 13
Appreciate the insight. I’m gonna check tuning. My now shop has some new people in it so I’ll verify how they did.
No. Add to the right yoke, and untwist the left.Add twists to the left yokes for a nock right tear?
No. Add to the right yoke, and untwist the left.
Thanks for the inputNormal. New strings settle I. And the bow needs to be re tuned after a couple hundred shots into a new string. Take it back. Lost shops will tell you to come back after 200 ish shots.
Your arrows are fine. With a mechanical release it’s hard to be overspined on a modern compound.
Set the bow back to spec and yoke tune for a clean paper test.
Yeah that was me, I stated it wrong. You want to pull the cam in the direction of the tear. So left broadhead equals right tear, so lean cam to the right to realign power stroke. My bad.That's what I thought. Someone else advised to add twist to the left and I was pretty sure that wasn't correct.
Been there, done that. Heck, I still move my sight the wrong way left/right once in a while if i'm distracted.Yeah that was me, I stated it wrong. You want to pull the cam in the direction of the tear. So left broadhead equals right tear, so lean cam to the right to realign power stroke. My bad.
I disagree. I want the cleanest flight possible at factory specs, including centershot, with true cam rotation. Then, if necessary (and it’s usually not if yokes are turning the cams true, arrow spine is good and form is good) micro adjust rest last to bring FP and bh groups together.Move rest first. From the first post or the thread title it sounds like your arrows with field points fly true so no need to paper tune again or even twist yokes. If the arrows with broadheads are flying true but to the left of field points then adjust your rest first before any yoke tuning. It wasn’t clear to me if they are just hitting to left or actually hitting as a nock left issue?