Brendan
WKR
So, my Hoyt recently had some work done on it, including new strings installed, so I am currently setting it up from scratch. I figured while I'm doing it, I might as well document the process to get it dialed in. All the way from initial setup, to broadhead tuned and ready to hunt with sight tapes generated. I figure this might answer some questions for some other people, and maybe someone teaches me something along the way.
Any questions - ask away.
My bow is a 2016 Hoyt Carbon Defiant Turbo, #3 cam. I'll be in the A or the B slot of the cam because of my draw length (more forgiving, but slower). Tools that I use include a vice to get everything leveled, press, draw board, digital bow scale and a variety of small things.
So far - put the bow in a vice this morning with the sight bar installed. I use a combination of small levels to make it easy to keep everything leveled in various directions. I use two of the Hamskea easy levels, a big construction level, and then cheap string / arrow levels to check everything.
I am starting with my bow in the A slot - which should be 28", but in my experience my Hoyt's always run .5" or even a little more long when I get them set up. My finished draw length should be 28.5" - 28.75" with this bow.
First step with a Hoyt because of the rubber shelf pad - I take an allen key and stick it through the berger hole from the back, and put a silver dot of paint on the rubber shelf in the center of the hole so I can align my arrow there later.
Next - I cut off the d loop and nocking points that the dealer installed for me because they weren't in the right place for my liking. I installed my sight bar so I can level off of it, and then installed and leveled my rest. My starting point is with the rest as far forward as it'll go without interfering with the riser shelf. This may be modified later once I do some torque tuning.
Next step - install top and bottom nock points to keep an arrow dead level dead center through the berger hole. I set center shot so a nocked arrow at brace runs straight parallel to the riser. On my Hoyt this is around 13/16" measured from above the rubber shelf pad at the front of the riser to the center of the arrow. I like dual nock points so I can change a D-loop later without needing to re-tune at all. After everything is where I want it - I install a D-loop but don't really cinch it down yet.
That's where I am now - bow goes in the press next to set initial draw weight, timing, cam lean and make sure that I'm not getting any peep rotation...
Some tools:
Berger Hole:
Bow in the vice in my little dungeon of a shop:
Any questions - ask away.
My bow is a 2016 Hoyt Carbon Defiant Turbo, #3 cam. I'll be in the A or the B slot of the cam because of my draw length (more forgiving, but slower). Tools that I use include a vice to get everything leveled, press, draw board, digital bow scale and a variety of small things.
So far - put the bow in a vice this morning with the sight bar installed. I use a combination of small levels to make it easy to keep everything leveled in various directions. I use two of the Hamskea easy levels, a big construction level, and then cheap string / arrow levels to check everything.
I am starting with my bow in the A slot - which should be 28", but in my experience my Hoyt's always run .5" or even a little more long when I get them set up. My finished draw length should be 28.5" - 28.75" with this bow.
First step with a Hoyt because of the rubber shelf pad - I take an allen key and stick it through the berger hole from the back, and put a silver dot of paint on the rubber shelf in the center of the hole so I can align my arrow there later.
Next - I cut off the d loop and nocking points that the dealer installed for me because they weren't in the right place for my liking. I installed my sight bar so I can level off of it, and then installed and leveled my rest. My starting point is with the rest as far forward as it'll go without interfering with the riser shelf. This may be modified later once I do some torque tuning.
Next step - install top and bottom nock points to keep an arrow dead level dead center through the berger hole. I set center shot so a nocked arrow at brace runs straight parallel to the riser. On my Hoyt this is around 13/16" measured from above the rubber shelf pad at the front of the riser to the center of the arrow. I like dual nock points so I can change a D-loop later without needing to re-tune at all. After everything is where I want it - I install a D-loop but don't really cinch it down yet.
That's where I am now - bow goes in the press next to set initial draw weight, timing, cam lean and make sure that I'm not getting any peep rotation...
Some tools:
Berger Hole:
Bow in the vice in my little dungeon of a shop:
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