Friends enjoying and sharing our passion for competitive archery while hoping to educate those that are interested in helping grow our sport! Thanks for watching!
I think i read somewhere that "face walking is permitted with one anchor point", but i'm not sure what that means? I suspect it has to do with arching shots and lobbing arrows, but what do they mean by "one anchor point"? Is it actually one draw length? Idk. I could go between 24" and 25", yet still supposedly be doing a mustache draw, no?
!ce you've cut and glued points shoot ALL your arrows to know how they spin before you fletch..... then fletch following the rotation of the arrows....
Those aren't perfect bullet holes by any means, those are tears. Maybe if you used a heavier grade sheet of paper, it would better illustrate the bullet holes but as those are right now, they're far from perfect. Think of a bullet hole in the literal sense and you'll see my point
For the right offset, did you change the string twist direction into counterclock? If not the test wouldnt be accurate, for right offset twist the string counter-clockwise and for left offset twist the string clockwise. If you mismatch that it would give inaccurate result, good luck
It took alittle bit for me to figure out but I also never looked at the instructions lol, I will make a video discussing the setup very soon. Once I figured it out, it works very smoothly. Thanks for watching!
If you believe this guy can consistently shoot a 1-2" group at 70 yards, who cares the direction his arrow is spinning? You would be looking to buy his manufacturer sponsored vehicle, bow, rest, sight, stabilizer, arrows, pants, hat, shirts, and release. World champion archers cannot achieve this, and neither can "Chris"
This video is passing along info we've gleaned through actual practice and effort. Nothing to be gained by faking our distances. Not hard to shoot a 2" group at 70 yards if you consistently practice at that distance with properly tuned equipment.
It wouldn't be cheap, but it may not be impossible, I'd love to see them get used for their intended purpose, especially by a young person growing into the next pro!
My question is if this is really a big deal, then why do broadheads and field points come in a right thread instead of a left. I kind of feel there is more to this story then just the helical. When it comes down too it, the vains are going to over-power the arrow regardless of the direction the strings are wound. I do think it will effect accuracy but not to the same level you show which makes we wonder if something else is in play here.
Chris, it means that your release agrees with the spin (torque) of your release. For a right handed, off the shelf finger shooter it means everything with spine (paradox) combined.🌞
Think about the fact that a $20 toaster from Walmart is packaged a thousand times better than a $1,000-$1,600 bow. That little bit of bubble wrap isn't remotely helping that bow if the box it's in sees any type of damage. What's sad is that what you showed is considered great packaging in the archery industry.
You have to shoot a bare shaft arrow about 6 feet away and see which way the arrow spins by making a mark on the shaft near the nock. If your bare shaft turns left then you fletch your arrows left and right if it turns right
probably a stupid question, does the 6 have a lower rear stab mount or do you use a bracket for both stabilizers out of the front mount. I assume its got both options
Hoping to have a get together once everything is finished and cleaned up. Been crazy busy lately, so everything is taking longer to finish than planned.