Do you know where your shims are at? I believe stock for a right handed bow is one small shim, one medium on the left side of the cams. There should be "fill" on the right side. For my bow that is one large shim and two small shims.
Is your arrow at or near center shot? If you have a stabilizer installed on the front is it running parallel to the arrow when its on the rest? Before I added some twists to my yokes I was able to get bullet holes by simply moving the rest it was way off of center shot. The arrow when on the rest was pointed way right of parallel.
I was able to remove a left tear from my bow by adding twists to both top and bottom left cable yokes and removing twists from the right cable yokes. The cables go through that weird cross/twist plastic piece which might be why your friend doesnt think he can yoke tune.
You can yoke tune, shim cams, move rest, or adjust cable rod in and out.
Can you post a picture of a paper tear with you shooting the bow?
Or a picture of a fletched and bare shaft group in a foam target at 20 yards.
The Epsilon has 3 different settings for riser width on universal mount. Remove rest from bracket then remove dovetail, you will see the 3 holes that a pin can lock into. Pick the one that centers rest best at 13/16. Lancaster's youtube review of epsilon will show it well.Have you guys measured your center shot on these? Mine is shooting well (bullet holes) and its measuring ~13/16" off the riser right now but thats a ways off my hamskea epsilon being centered. I am just curious if that is everyone else's experience.
Arrow is gone so quick it's actually way easier to shoot than you would think. For shorter draw length guys it's a good option as well.With a 5.5 inch brace height I'll pass. I think that would be tough for the normal hunter to shoot well.
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